Spring 2002/Pasadena
ST565
Johnston

ST565: THEOLOGY AND CONTEMPORARY LITERATURE. Robert K. Johnston.


DESCRIPTION:

This course will explore (1) contemporary attitudes toward the "spiritual" found in selected American novels and (2) the means of theological dialogue with these works. Books by such authors as Tom Robbins, Anne Lamott, Chaim Potok, Bernard Malamud, John Updike, Flannery O'Conner, and Peter DeVries will be read. While debunking or listening, symbolizing or secularizing, arguing or affirming, current American fiction is often found interacting with the religious currents that pervade our culture. As such, it invites dialogue from a theological perspective.

RELEVANCE FOR MINISTRY:
Preparation for ministry too often assumes students possess skills in cultural analysis and interaction. This course helps students read their "culture" by having them read in their culture. In the process it provides tools and insight necessary (though not sufficient) for engaged, effective ministry.

COURSE FORMAT:
Discussion and lecture. One novel will be read and discussed each week. Because the enrollment will be limited to forty, students will have the opportunity for active participation in the discussion. Class will meet once a week for a three hour session.

REQUIRED READING:
DeVries, Peter. Blood of the Lamb. Penguin Books, 1982. (out of print)

Hansen, Ron. A Stay Against Confusion. Harper, 2001.

Kingsolver, Barbara. Animal Dreams. Harper Perennial, 1993.

Lamott, Anne. All New People. Counterpoint, 1989.

__________. Traveling Mercies. Doubleday, 2000.

Malamud, Bernard. The Assistant. Harper Perennial, 2000.

O'Connor, Flannery. A Good Man is Hard to Find. Rutgers, 1993.

Potok, Chaim. My Name is Asher Lev. Fawcett, 1996.

Robbins, Tom. Another Roadside Attraction. Bantam, 1990.

Updike, John. The Centaur. Fawcett, 1996.

Selected critical essays.

ASSIGNMENTS:
  1. Class presentation on a selected novel.

  2. Three to five page critique of Flannery O'Connor's A Good Man is Hard to Find.

  3. Eight to ten page paper on a novel by Barbara Kingsolver or Anne Lamott.

PREREQUISITES:
None.

RELATIONSHIP TO CURRICULUM:
Meets the interdisciplinary course requirement for the M.A.C.L. in Integrative Studies.

FINAL EXAMINATION:
None.