Dickens and Eucharist: Sacramental Medievalism in Bleak House

This essay excavates a subterranean medieval presence in Dickens that squares the uncanny presence-in-absence of the Middle Ages in the nineteenth-century mind with the absent-present sacramental logic that animated the medieval mind. Medievalism properly understood, then, is an exercise more subtle...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Christianity & literature
Main Author: Curran, Timothy (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Johns Hopkins University Press [2017]
In: Christianity & literature
RelBib Classification:CD Christianity and Culture
KBQ North America
NBP Sacramentology; sacraments
TJ Modern history
Further subjects:B BLEAK House (Book : Dickens)
B Dickens
B Religion
B SACRAMENTS in literature
B Lord's Supper
B Eucharist
B DICKENS, Charles, 1812-1870
B Medievalism
B MEDIEVALISM in literature
B Sacrament
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Summary:This essay excavates a subterranean medieval presence in Dickens that squares the uncanny presence-in-absence of the Middle Ages in the nineteenth-century mind with the absent-present sacramental logic that animated the medieval mind. Medievalism properly understood, then, is an exercise more subtle and pervasive than a modern artist’s biased appropriation of a particular medieval topos: I contend that medievalism as a practice is sacramental. I argue that Dickens’s mobilization of medieval sacramentality reveals his participation in a radical form of medievalism concerned with activating and inhabiting traditional symbolic categories, and his interest in making these categories live again according to the very conceptual formulas in which they were originally imagined.
ISSN:2056-5666
Contains:Enthalten in: Christianity & literature
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1177/0148333117708262