Glimpses of Glory: John Bunyan and English Dissent

Cover
Stanford University Press, 2002 - 693 Seiten
This is a major reinterpretation of John Bunyan, a prolific author best known for his two allegories, The Pilgrim's Progress and The Holy War, and his spiritual autobiography, Grace Abounding. In this book, Richard L. Greaves draws on recent literature on depression to demonstrate that Bunyan suffered from this mood disorder as a young man and then used this experience to help mold his literary works. Light and darkness, joy and sadness, despair and hope became key literary motifs.

In this biography, each of Bunyan's works, including the dozen published posthumously, is analyzed in its immediate historical context. The Pilgrim's Progress, although not published until 1678, takes its rightful place as a contribution to the momentous debate over conscience between 1667 and 1673. This historical approach, as distinct from the literary one favored by nearly all of Bunyan's biographers, reveals the changes in his views over time, including his interest in the millenarian Fifth Monarchists in the 1650s, his circumspect endorsement of militant action to block the anticipated succession of James, duke of York, in the 1680s, his retreat from this position following the disclosure of the Rye House conspiracy, and his cooperation with James II's government when it offered toleration to dissenters.

Bunyan's extraordinary ability to rouse the imaginations of his readers is shown to be rooted in his intense spirituality and powerful creativity, and given emotive force by his deep sympathy for the poor and oppressed and his fierce commitment to the principle that truth must be free. Two periods in prison, one lasting more than eleven years, failed to crush his spirit. Unbroken, he emerged from confinement to continue his preaching and writing, having honed a regime of composition that served him well as a free man. No less significant was his triumph over debilitating depressive moods that left him with a keen sensitivity to the importance of light, warmth, and love. Bunyan's potent creativity enabled him to turn his experiences into a gripping spiritual autobiography and two major allegories that attest to his triumph over crippling despair and a repressive government.

 

Inhalt

II
1
III
3
IV
4
V
11
VI
21
VII
30
VIII
31
IX
61
XLVI
355
XLVII
356
XLVIII
366
XLIX
374
L
390
LI
401
LII
403
LIII
411

X
67
XI
75
XII
88
XIII
96
XIV
103
XV
115
XVI
121
XVII
127
XVIII
130
XIX
146
XX
161
XXI
173
XXII
176
XXIII
189
XXIV
199
XXV
207
XXVI
210
XXVII
211
XXVIII
216
XXIX
227
XXX
229
XXXI
243
XXXII
252
XXXIII
266
XXXIV
271
XXXV
278
XXXVI
286
XXXVII
291
XXXVIII
301
XXXIX
309
XL
313
XLI
317
XLII
323
XLIII
328
XLIV
334
XLV
341
LIV
414
LV
419
LVI
426
LVII
433
LVIII
439
LIX
443
LX
452
LXI
455
LXII
470
LXIII
479
LXIV
480
LXV
485
LXVI
498
LXVII
515
LXVIII
519
LXIX
526
LXX
530
LXXI
535
LXXII
538
LXXIII
548
LXXIV
554
LXXV
564
LXXVII
565
LXXVIII
573
LXXIX
580
LXXX
588
LXXXI
594
LXXXII
601
LXXXIII
610
LXXXIV
619
LXXXV
637
LXXXVII
643
LXXXVIII
661
LXXXIX
665
Urheberrecht

Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen

Autoren-Profil (2002)

Richard L. Greaves is Robert O. Lawton Distinguished Professor of History at Florida State University. He is the author, most recently, of Dublin's Merchant-Quaker: Anthony Sharp and the Community of Friends, 1643-1707 (Stanford, 1998) and God's Other Children: Protestant Nonconformists and the Emergence of Denominational Churches in Ireland, 1660-1700 (Stanford, 1997).

Bibliografische Informationen