Not Etched in Stone: Essays on Ritual Memory, Soul, and SocietyMarie A. Conn, Therese Benedict McGuire The essays presented by Professors Marie A. Conn and Therese McGuire examine stone and water as vehicles of ritual memory through the lenses of various disciplines. In seven concise yet revealing chapters, the authors examine instances throughout history and unbound by geography of stone and water as real or abstract objects that shape our lives, possibly without our notice. Chapters topics include: .Water as a vehicle for ritual memory from the earliest days of human history to the present-day. .An investigation of the aesthetic principles of the Middle Ages up to the Gothic styles of cathedrals in North America. .Julian of Norwich, the famous cloistress, walled in by stone in comparison to Etty Hillesum, a WWII-era mystic, whose small desk used to write her revealing diaries became her stone cloister cell. .The Irish, water, and stone in Finnegan's Wake. .Warming the "stone heart" of a child pummeled by the foster care system. .The lack of clean water that contributes to wide-spread disease. .Group behavior and the eventualities of war through stone-like, (uncooperative and hardened) psychological states." |
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Page 62
The presence of Yeats and O' Brien also serves to elucidate Joyce's use of water
and stone in the contrast between revolutionary singlemindedness and a more
fluid, plurality of mindset. Yeats' poem, "Easter 1916," cited in the epigraph above
...
The presence of Yeats and O' Brien also serves to elucidate Joyce's use of water
and stone in the contrast between revolutionary singlemindedness and a more
fluid, plurality of mindset. Yeats' poem, "Easter 1916," cited in the epigraph above
...
Page 63
On Easter Monday morning, Patrick Pearse read the Proclamation from the steps
of the GPO [General Post Office] to a largely indifferent crowd, many people
attempting to go about their daily business as ususal. (133) Yeats' play "Cathleen
ni ...
On Easter Monday morning, Patrick Pearse read the Proclamation from the steps
of the GPO [General Post Office] to a largely indifferent crowd, many people
attempting to go about their daily business as ususal. (133) Yeats' play "Cathleen
ni ...
Page 72
The recorso (final book) of the Wake, opening with the rising sun of Easter
Morning, is Joyce's rewriting of Irish history and particularly the Easter Uprising.
In the opening call to rise up: "O Rally! O rally!" we hear a potential echo of
Patrick ...
The recorso (final book) of the Wake, opening with the rising sun of Easter
Morning, is Joyce's rewriting of Irish history and particularly the Easter Uprising.
In the opening call to rise up: "O Rally! O rally!" we hear a potential echo of
Patrick ...
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