Suggestions for novels about characteristic experiences of religion
The friend of a friend is going to be teaching a comparative religion course at a community college, and has asked for suggestions for reading for the students. Can anyone help? Friend writes:
The intention is to teach the course through literature that shows how religious experience is oriented towards dealing with death. Particularly interested in perspectives from Hindu, Islamic, and Christian (especially Catholic) religious experience...
Further discussion has led to the clarification that the novel need not be "about" death in any obvious sense, but it should give a sense of a religion's characteristic influence on how a character approaches his or her situation. Non-proselytizing works are also high on the list. So far, "Siddhartha" (Hesse) and "The Chosen" (Potok) are on the list, if that helps by way of example.
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(Anonymous) 2005-07-28 04:26 pm (UTC)(link)These immediately spring to mind for a Catholic viewpoint: Frost In May, The Lost Traveller, The Sugar House and Beyond the Glass, all by Antonia White.
I'll ponder and see if I can come up with anything else.
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The Death of Ivan Ilyich (well, OK, that IS about death)
There must be something by Flannery O'Connor that fits the bill
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My rec, The Fifth Sacred Thing (http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0553373803/qid=1122586583/sr=2-3/ref=pd_bbs_b_2_3/104-3425878-5243948), which deals with an eclectic pagan perspective. I liked it a lot, but judging by the reactions of other people who've read it, I'm not completely sure it works equally well for people completely unfamiliar with pagan symbolism.
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Then there's "The Great Divorce" by Lewis, which isn't so much about death as a fantastical allegory about Heaven, so it's probably not what you want.
Maybe biography is better... like "The Hiding Place" by Corrie Ten Boom.
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I'll see what else I can think of. It's amazing how quickly my brain can go blank when I set it to a particular task like this. I always manage to think of a dozen appropriate titles well after the need has passed!
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Oddly enough, I just finished Karen Armstrong's memoir the other night; I thought it was very good: the writing was a little artificial here and there, but I thought it was honest and didn't attempt to shock.
I loved The Sparrow; my reading group loathed it.
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