Approaching Apocalypse : unveiling Revelation in Victorian writing
Kevin Mills (Author)
"A great deal of Victorian literature recycles themes, images, and language from apocalpytic literature, in what might be described as an affinity with the genre. With this affinity in mind Approaching Apocalypse examines certain structuring oppositions that shape apocalyptic literature, and sets out to decode their significance for Victorian writing. They are: human/inhuman, desert/city, veiled/revealed, time/eternal, and this world/other world. The five main chapters of the book each deal with one of these opposites, reading a wide range of Victorian texts, including novels, poems, plays, sermons, and other less easily categorized texts. At the heart of each chapter is an extended reading of one or two texts selected for their particularly telling insights into the relationship between Victorian writing and the Book of Revelation." "Written for scholars and students at both the graduate and undergraduate levels with an interest in modern literary studies, this book will also appeal to anyone interested in the Victorian era, biblical studies, the history of ideas, literature and myth, and theology."--Jacket
Print Book, English, 2007
Bucknell University Press, Lewisburg [PA], 2007
Criticism, interpretation, etc
228 pages ; 24 cm
9780838756270, 0838756271
71210112
Apocalypse then
Human and inhuman
The desert in the city
Veiled unveilings
Time after time
The third space