

An edition of Christina Rossetti's Faithful Imagination (2006)
The Devotional Poetry and Prose
By Dinah Roe
Publish Date
January 23, 2007
Publisher
Palgrave Macmillan
Language
eng
Pages
248
Description:
Dinah Roe challenges the persistent myth that religion dulled the edge of Rossetti's creativity, arguing instead that religion sharpened her wits. It reveals how Rossetti's literary legacy has suffered from a misunderstanding of the nature, history and sincerity of the poet's Christianity. Despite advances made by feminist critics in the rediscovery of Rossetti, the myth of the poet's 'overscrupulous' Christianity persists. The thoughtful, dynamic and religious artist who lived and produced well into her sixties is in danger of being overlooked. Rossetti assimilated various influences, from Tractarian writing to the poetry of Keats and Dante, to sustain her on a lifelong and exhilarating march 'Up-Hill'. In both prose and poetry, she invites the reader to engage with a sophisticated network of biblical allusion, in which Christian doctrine is re-thought and sometimes re-forged. Unless we take this invitation seriously, we will not take the true measure of Rossetti.
subjects: Rossetti, christina georgina, 1830-1894, Christianity and literature, Christian poetry, history and criticism, Christianity in literature, Criticism and interpretation, Religion, History, English Christian poetry, History and criticism, Faith in literature, POETRY, English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh, Literary studies: c 1800 to c 1900, Poetry by individual poets, Literature, Devotie