The theme of Adam's Grace is the interplay of theology and literature across a wide range of genres and vernaculars: in particular, the use of medieval literary texts to explain the balance of the Fall and Redemption, the universality of original sin, and the identity of mankind with its first parents, Adam and Eve. The process begins with the Christian tradition of apocryphal Adam-lives, which live on and develop in many vernaculars. Later, Adam isused as a literary model, on whom many well-known Christian figures of the middle ages - knights, popes, emperors, kings and saints - can be seen to be based. They include Gregorius, the "medieval Oedipus", whose case demonstrates the resolution of the paradox of the felix culpa; Parzival, searching for the Holy Grail and for God in the hostile world into which he has been ejected; and the many medieval figures (literary and even historical) associated with the legends of leprosy, blood and healing which reflect the sacrifice in the Redemption. The last part of the book looks at the drama, first of all the medieval representations of the Fall and the Passion, and then the rather different portrayal of Adam on stage in the Reformation and the Counter-Reformation.

BRIAN MURDOCH is Professor of German at Stirling University.



Autorentext

BRIAN MURDOCH is Emeritus Professor of German in the School of Languages, Cultures, and Religions at Stirling University, Scotland. He is the author of many books, including titles for both Camden House and D.S. Brewer. He edited the first two volumes of The Camden House History of German Literature.

Titel
Adam's Grace: Fall and Redemption in Medieval Literature
EAN
9781846150012
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
01.06.2000
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Wasserzeichen
Anzahl Seiten
218