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T. S. Eliot: Christian Spirituality in the West End
24th May 2022: 4:00 pm - 5:00 pm BST
The Christian Literary Imagination Series
Continuing from the previous academic year, over the course of the 2021-22 academic year the Future of the Humanities Project is sponsoring a series of webinars on the Christian literary imagination in collaboration with Blackfriars Hall, University of Oxford. The ‘Christian Literary Imagination Series’ will explore the role and function of the arts and humanities in the development of the individual and society.
The hour-long virtual events will be followed by a Q & As chaired by Professor Michael Scott and Rev Fr Joseph Simmons SJ. These events are free and hosted on Zoom by Georgetown University.
A talk by Professor Michael J Collins, Georgetown University, followed by a panel discussion on the Christian Literary Imagination.
After World War II, T. S. Eliot for the most part abandoned poetry to become a playwright. He had by then come to believe the plays he had written before the war, Murder in the Cathedral (1935) and The Family Reunion (1939), were dead ends because neither of them provided a model upon which to build a tradition of poetic drama. Eliot’s goal after the war then was to write poetic drama that employed the conventions of popular West End theatre and simultaneously conveyed a Christian vision of the world. The competing demands this goal put upon him are the focus of this talk. They suggest the challenges, or possibly the conventional critical prejudices, a writer in our time faces in articulating a religious vision of the world.
To commemorate the final webinar of the series, the Q&A session will be followed by a 15-minute panel discussion chaired by Michael Scott with Rev. Joseph Simmons S.J., Kathryn Temple, and Michael Collins on the Christian Literary Imagination.
Featured
Michael Collins is a teaching professor of English and dean emeritus at Georgetown University. He has published essays on Anglo-Welsh poetry in Poetry Wales, World Literature Today, the Dictionary of Literary Biography, and the Anglo-Welsh Review. He is an honorary fellow of Wrexham Glyndwr University, University of Wales, and a recipient of Georgetown University’s Presidential Medal and its Bunn Award for Outstanding Teaching.
Rev. Joseph Simmons, S.J., (moderator) is an American Catholic priest currently writing his doctoral thesis at Campion Hall, Oxford, under the supervision of Professor Graham Ward. He is exploring the Christian imagination and the fertile place where belief and unbelief touch in the fiction of Virginia Woolf and Marilynne Robinson. Simmons previously studied theology at Boston College and the Harvard Divinity School. His Licentiate in Sacred Theology thesis, “Via Literaria: Marilynne Robinson’s Theology Through a Literary Imagination,” explored the convergence of literary and Christian imaginations.
Michael Scott (moderator) is senior dean, fellow of Blackfriars Hall, Oxford, college adviser for postgraduate students, and a member of the Las Casas Institute. He also serves as senior adviser to the president of Georgetown University. Scott previously was the pro-vice-chancellor at De Montfort University and founding vice-chancellor of Wrexham Glyndwr University.
Contact:
Las Casas Institute with Georgetown University
lascasas@bfriars.ox.ac.uk