Description

Book Synopsis
God's image as Judge can engender shame and guilt in women. This study explores the underworld journeys of women like Demeter and Psyche, and their reflections in works by such women as Sylvia Plath and Virginia Woolf, arguing that the tradition they represent has much to offer modern Christians.

Trade Review

“Gagné explores women's psychological and spiritual journeys through the lens of three ancient myths and modern literature. Many feminists seek to recover the goddess of preliterary civilizations. Gagné claims that the literary myths of underworld journeys of the goddesses Innana, Demeter/Persephone, and Psyche are integral to her wholeness as a Christian woman. She says that Innana illustrates that one cannot move from powerless to compassionate without first venting anger, while Demeter/Persephone shows that the discovery of wholeness is never once-and-for-all; Psyche demonstrates the struggle to discover self within passionate relationships. Gagné is convinced these stories are useful because they integrate sexuality and suffering, leading to a new experience of God. Explaining how these themes are explored in the works of Sylvia Plath, Joan Didion, Mary Gordon, Virginia Woolf, and other authors, she concludes with reflections drawn from the diary of Etta Hillesum—a woman who exemplified the underworld experiences and encountered God. Erudite and well written, this book offers a fresh perspective for Christian feminist-heirs to a tradition that has distanced bodily experience from spiritualities. Those unfamiliar with the literature that Gagné refers to will have limited appreciation of the study—those who know it will find her work masterful. For libraries supporting women's studies, literature, and spirituality; upper-division undergraduates and above.” —Choice

* Choice *

“Three Years of Writing, twelve years of teaching a course on the “Woman’s Journey,” and a lifetime of intense introspection have resulted in a hypnotic, ...monolog that describes the author’s journey towards achieving an edifiying sense of self-knowledge.” —Utopian Studies

The Uses of Darkness

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    A Paperback by Laurie Brands Gagne

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      View other formats and editions of The Uses of Darkness by Laurie Brands Gagne

      Publisher: University of Notre Dame Press
      Publication Date: 8/31/2000 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780268043063, 978-0268043063
      ISBN10: 026804306X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      God's image as Judge can engender shame and guilt in women. This study explores the underworld journeys of women like Demeter and Psyche, and their reflections in works by such women as Sylvia Plath and Virginia Woolf, arguing that the tradition they represent has much to offer modern Christians.

      Trade Review

      “Gagné explores women's psychological and spiritual journeys through the lens of three ancient myths and modern literature. Many feminists seek to recover the goddess of preliterary civilizations. Gagné claims that the literary myths of underworld journeys of the goddesses Innana, Demeter/Persephone, and Psyche are integral to her wholeness as a Christian woman. She says that Innana illustrates that one cannot move from powerless to compassionate without first venting anger, while Demeter/Persephone shows that the discovery of wholeness is never once-and-for-all; Psyche demonstrates the struggle to discover self within passionate relationships. Gagné is convinced these stories are useful because they integrate sexuality and suffering, leading to a new experience of God. Explaining how these themes are explored in the works of Sylvia Plath, Joan Didion, Mary Gordon, Virginia Woolf, and other authors, she concludes with reflections drawn from the diary of Etta Hillesum—a woman who exemplified the underworld experiences and encountered God. Erudite and well written, this book offers a fresh perspective for Christian feminist-heirs to a tradition that has distanced bodily experience from spiritualities. Those unfamiliar with the literature that Gagné refers to will have limited appreciation of the study—those who know it will find her work masterful. For libraries supporting women's studies, literature, and spirituality; upper-division undergraduates and above.” —Choice

      * Choice *

      “Three Years of Writing, twelve years of teaching a course on the “Woman’s Journey,” and a lifetime of intense introspection have resulted in a hypnotic, ...monolog that describes the author’s journey towards achieving an edifiying sense of self-knowledge.” —Utopian Studies

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