'All Possible Art': George Herbert's The Country Parson

'All Possible Art': George Herbert's The Country Parson

by Kristine A. Wolberg
'All Possible Art': George Herbert's The Country Parson

'All Possible Art': George Herbert's The Country Parson

by Kristine A. Wolberg

Hardcover

$105.00 
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Overview

Long studied for historical, biographical, or sociological purposes, George Herbert's The Country Parson has not received the literary appreciation it deserves. Through a literary analysis exploring genre, themes, topics, emphasis, context, and models, this study finds The Country Parson to be a carefully conceived and executed piece of literary prose. Herbert wrote this work after the popular Renaissance courtesy book rather than in the more common homiletic style of contemporary clerical manuals. While his techniques for artful self-fashioning might have been borrowed from the pages of Castiglione or Della Casa, his purposes could not. Herbert believed in the mimetic effects of outer behavior in shaping the inner man. In The Country Parson Herbert used 'all possible art' to both describe and inspire the 'Form and Character of a true Pastour', that he and his fellow clergy may have a 'Mark to aim at'.

The Country Parson should be seen as a carefully crafted piece of literary prose working within, but also transforming, the popular genres of clerical manual and courtesy book, using "all possible art" to please and instruct both pastor and church member and ultimately (as Herbert hoped) to serve God. Literary historians, Herbert students, and cultural historians will all find this study worth their examination.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781611473841
Publisher: University Press Copublishing Division
Publication date: 09/01/2008
Pages: 165
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.30(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

Kristine A. Wolberg has taught literature and writing courses for the University of Notre Dame, Houghton College, and Colorado Christian University and has lectured at the University of Notre Dame, Calvin College, and the Newberry Library, Center for Renaissance Studies.
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