Landscapes of Encounter

The Portrayal of Catholicism in the Novels of Brian Moore

By Liam Gearon
Categories: Literary Criticism, Religious Studies
Publisher: University of Calgary Press
Hardcover : 9781552380482, 312 pages, September 2002
Ebook (PDF) : 9781552383803, 312 pages, September 2002

Table of contents

Acknowledgements
Preface

Part I: Introduction

Landscapes of Encounter: The Portrayal of Catholicism in the Novels of Brian Moore

Part II: The Fictional Portrayal of Pre-Vatican II Catholicism

The Early Irish Novels
The Early North American Novels

 

Part III: Fictional Portrayals of Vatican II Catholicism and Beyond

Catholicism Reappraised: Ireland Revisited
North America Revisited: Post-Vatican II and Postcolonial Perspectives
Moore's Portrayal of the Church in the Modern World: Theological Universality and Cultural Particularity

Part IV: Conclusion

Moore's Portrayal of Catholicism: A Conclusion

Endnotes
Bibliography
Index

Description

Brian Moore (1921-1999) is one of the few novelists whose literary portrayal of Catholicism effectively spans the period prior to and following the Second Vatican Council. His novels - from Judith Hearne (1955) to his final work, The Magician's Wife (1997) - are characterized by an enormously varied portrayal of pre- and post-Vatican II Catholicism.

Many critics have discussed how Moore's life is reflected in his works, while others have dismissed his fictions as simple narratives in the mould of classical realism. In this book, Gearon contends that Moore's fictions are far more complex, as he was one of the great observers of Catholicism in all its modern and historical controversy. Moore's writings thus portray a world where religion is in constant encounter, and often conflict, with alternative cultural, ideological, and theological worldviews.

Landscapes of Encounter provides the only full treatment of Moore's work as a literary convergence of the theological and the ideological, and specifically as a convergence of post-Vatican II and post-colonial perspectives.

Reviews

[An] exemplary analysis of religion and literature in the works of a relatively neglected but important novelist.

—Barbara Pell, University of Toronto Quarterly

Gearon?s Landscapes of Encounter is an engaging book that sends one back to the novels of Brian Moore and the documents of Vatican II

—Douglas R. Leston, Studies in Religion/Sciences Religieuses