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Affection and Estrangement: a Southern Family Memoir
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 281

Affection and Estrangement: a Southern Family Memoir

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2009-10-30
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  • Publisher: iUniverse

Preston Browning Jr. entered the world in 1929, a few months before the Crash and the onset of the Great Depression. In Culpeper, Virginia, Browning grew up amid the pervasive poverty of the times where he recalls being labeled by his father as the worlds worst grouch, led in song by Miss Lizzy Lovellwho banged on the piano at the local Episcopal church, and seated astride a cow who needed a lot of convincing to take him for a ride around the pasture beyond his house. With humor and exceptional detail, Browning shares a lively memoir that focuses on his coming-of-age journey and subsequent experiences in the rural South during the 1930s and 1940s, providing a compelling glimpse into how his ...

Struggling for the Soul of Our Country
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 338

Struggling for the Soul of Our Country

Struggling for the Soul of Our Country is a book in search of answers: what does it mean to struggle for the soul of a country and how does the life of citizenship influence our common future? While discussing major cultural and political issues, Browning addresses the deeper questions haunting many of our citizens and reflects upon the spiritual dimension of the crises America faces today. With titles such as "American Global Hegemony vs. the Quest for a New Humanity," "Why I Am a Christian Socialist," and "American Dystopia" these essays examine aspects of American political and cultural life in an effort to shed light on the pathologies that Browning claims undermine the health of the country's soul. This book invites the reader to examine the development of America as a militaristic empire, initiating multiple wars abroad, including a disastrous war in Iraq, and fostering at home a culture of violence that led to the assassination of an American president, John F. Kennedy, by agents of the US government.

Flannery O'Connor
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 168

Flannery O'Connor

Hailed by critics as one of the more con­troversial of contemporary American authors, Flannery O'Connor has been de­scribed as the most extreme Christian dualist since Dostoevsky. In this first full-length study of O'Connor's work, Brown­ing explores the implications of O'Con­nor's situation as a Roman Catholic in the South in the 1950s. From this point of departure Browning offers a detailed analysis of Wise Blood, A Good Man Is Hard to Find, The Vio­lent Bear It Away, and Everything That Rises Must Converge. Touching upon writings about intensely religious acts and dilemmas, this look at a Roman Catholic Southern writer will be of special interest to students of philosophy and religion.

Sandino's Grave and Other Poems
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 168

Sandino's Grave and Other Poems

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2018-05-23
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  • Publisher: Unknown

Several years ago, I contacted a poet who was known to advise writers about publication possibilities for their work. With considerable hope, I sent her 25 of my poems. When she came to consult with me a week later, she brought a sheet of paper on which were listed, under 3 headings--"too personal," "too political," and "Yes"--the results of decades of my labor. I was astonished to learn that the list marked "too political" contained many of what I considered my best poems. "Hell," I replied, "almost all of my poems are either political or personal." Even a totally innocuous poem such as "The Eyes of the Children of Solentiname" was destined to mold in the slush pile because I had included a...

Flannery O'Connor
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1098

Flannery O'Connor

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Affection and Estrangement
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 283

Affection and Estrangement

  • Type: Book
  • -
  • Published: 2009
  • -
  • Publisher: iUniverse

Focusing on race, religion, and class, author Preston M. Browning Jr. discusses life in the rural South as he experienced it in the 1930s and 1940s. With humorous touches and an eye for detail, this memoir provides not only snippets about the era but also the history of some of Virginia's oldest families. Born in 1929, Browning's childhood coincided with the Great Depression, and much of what he tells about his Culpeper, Virginia home communicates the ubiquitous poverty of the time. In addition, Affection and Estrangement: A Southern Family Memoir includes stories about relatives Browning remembers some quite eccentric, as well as ancestors from two distinguished Virginia families, the Cocke...

Struggling for the Soul of Our Country
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 370

Struggling for the Soul of Our Country

Struggling for the Soul of Our Country is a book in search of answers: what does it mean to struggle for the soul of a country and how does the life of citizenship influence our common future? While discussing major cultural and political issues, Browning addresses the deeper questions haunting many of our citizens and reflects upon the spiritual dimension of the crises America faces today. With titles such as "American Global Hegemony vs. the Quest for a New Humanity," "Why I Am a Christian Socialist," and "American Dystopia" these essays examine aspects of American political and cultural life in an effort to shed light on the pathologies that Browning claims undermine the health of the country's soul. This book invites the reader to examine the development of America as a militaristic empire, initiating multiple wars abroad, including a disastrous war in Iraq, and fostering at home a culture of violence that led to the assassination of an American president, John F. Kennedy, by agents of the US government.

Flannery O'Connor
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 173

Flannery O'Connor

When Flannery O'Connor began writing in the early 1950's, many reviewers assumed that she was little more than a talented female Erskine Caldwell, writing in the Southern gothic mode. And indeed her work was filled with freaks, one-armed con men, and pathological killers. By the time she died in 1964, serious readers of her fiction knew there was much more involved in her stories. What that extra was she called the added dimension, that is, the spiritual depth which she believed was as an ineluctable part of human life. Her stories dramatize the ways in which the holy or the sacred break into human life with the result of shocking readers out of their spiritual somnolence using characters wh...

Northrop Frye and American Fiction
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 249

Northrop Frye and American Fiction

Northrop Frye and American Fiction challenges recent interpretations of American fiction as a secular pursuit that long ago abandoned religious faith and the idea of transcendent experiences. Inspired by recent philosophical thinking on post-secularism and by Northrop Frye's theorizing on the connections between the Bible and the development of Western literature, Claude Le Fustec presents insightful readings of the presence of transcendence and biblical imagination in canonical novels by American writers ranging from Nathaniel Hawthorne to Toni Morrison. Examining these novels through the lens of Frye's ambitious account of literature's transcendent, or kerygmatic power, Le Fustec argues that American fiction has always contained the seeds of a rejection of radical skepticism and a return to spiritual experience. Beyond an insightful analysis of Frye's ideas, Northrop Frye and American Fiction is powerful testimony of their continued interpretive potential.

The Critical Reception of Flannery O'Connor, 1952-2017
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 282

The Critical Reception of Flannery O'Connor, 1952-2017

The first chronological overview of O'Connor criticism from the publication of her first novel, Wise Blood, in 1952 to the present.