Evidence on Her Own Behalf: Women's Narrative as Theological VoiceRowman & Littlefield Publishers, 1990 - 151 ページ Most theological language which is available is based on men's stories-stories told about men's lives, and interpreted from a distinctly masculine perspective. In such stories women, by and large, are marginal characters. When they occasionally do figure in a more central role, the meaning of their actions is explained from a male viewpoint. Before women can begin to ask questions about the meaning of their experience, they must understand what this experience has been, and this requires the telling of their own stories, in their own voice. Say's book draws on women's history, literary theory, and narrative theology to create a foundation for a critique of contemporary communitarian ethics. It incorporates a refinement of the theory of the feminization of religion and education in nineteenth-century Britain. |
目次
Paradigms | 11 |
11 | 27 |
The Structure of the Novel and Womens Narrative Voice | 57 |
著作権 | |
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argued articulated became Bourgeois Experience Brittain changes Christian Church claim concept of separate create creative cultural defined Desire and Domestic detective fiction divine Domestic Fiction dominance Dorothy L Dorothy Sayers eighteenth century England epistemological expression fact female feminine Feminism feminist Gaudy Night gender genre Goldberg Harriet Harriet Vane Ian Watt idea ideal ideology individual John Ruskin literary literature Lord Peter Lord Peter Wimsey Maker male masculine McKeon McWilliams-Tullberg mediate men's middle class mind modern moral argument moral authority moral debate Nancy Armstrong narrative paradigm narrative theology nature nineteenth century patriarchy Peter Gay political question reality reflected Religion Sayers's separate spheres Showalter significance social society theologians Theology and Narrative tion Tischler tradition truth understanding University Press values Victorian Girl virtue vision Watt woman women as novelists Women at Cambridge Women at Oxford Women Human women's experience women's lives women's narrative voice women's novels women's stories writing York