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DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.
DELIVERY: Please note, the Christmas deadline has now passed and we can no longer guarantee delivery before 25th December 2025.

Prayer and Embodiment in Nineteenth-Century Women’s Writing

Elizabeth Ludlow
Barcode 9781350356191
Hardback

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Original price £93.31 - Original price £93.31
Original price
£93.31
£93.31 - £93.31
Current price £93.31

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Release Date: 20/02/2025

Genre: Literary Criticism
Sub-Genre: Society & Culture
Label: Bloomsbury Academic
Series: New Directions in Religion and Literature
Language: English
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

In the 19th century, an era that saw a reconfiguration of the relationship between the self, the world and the divine, women writers probed the theological depths of embodied faith in new ways through poetry, fiction, devotional prose and life writing.

Elizabeth Ludlow explores how, through this process, they articulated what it means to pray, and thereby understand one’s place in a world of individual and communal bodies. The eight women writers discussed – Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Josephine Butler, George Eliot, Elizabeth Gaskell, Dora Greenwell, Felicia Hemans, Adelaide Procter and Christina Rossetti – provide accounts of prayer that stress that the only way to experience and respond to something of the transcendent is through embracing lived experience and through a recognition of the connectedness of all bodies.

In detailing how these writers engage with new ways of thinking about faith, desire and the material world, Ludlow argues that they offer models for ethical modes of being in the world and pave the way for later theologies of embodiment.