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Confessing the Flesh by Lesley Higgins
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Confessing the Flesh

Reading Hopkins in Context

University of Virginia Press · 2025-06-26

Confessing the Flesh: Reading Hopkins in Context

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Who It's For

  • Good for readers who enjoy LITERARY CRITICISM / Subjects & Themes / Gender Identity
  • Good for readers interested in century
  • Strong fit for readers who prefer grounded, real-world context.

What You Get

  • Themes: History, Christian, Religious.
  • Reading lane: Subjects & Themes and Modern.
  • Publisher: University of Virginia Press.

Categories

What we read

  • LITERARY CRITICISM / Subjects & Themes / Gender Identity

    88%
  • LITERARY CRITICISM / Modern / 19th Century

    69%
  • LITERARY CRITICISM / Subjects & Themes / Religion

    68%

About This Book

A new theoretical reading of the renowned poet and Jesuit priest Confessing the Flesh is an expansive, interdisciplinary analysis of how aesthetic and religious discourses function in dialogue in the work of Gerard Manley Hopkins, the celebrated Victorian-era poet and Catholic priest. Through Hopkins, Lesley Higgins reveals how religion was expressed, lived, and debated in the nineteenth century. Both a comprehensive analysis of innovative Victorian poetry and a cultural his...

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A new theoretical reading of the renowned poet and Jesuit priest Confessing the Flesh is an expansive, interdisciplinary analysis of how aesthetic and religious discourses function in dialogue in the work of Gerard Manley Hopkins, the celebrated Victorian-era poet and Catholic priest. Through Hopkins, Lesley Higgins reveals how religion was expressed, lived, and debated in the nineteenth century. Both a comprehensive analysis of innovative Victorian poetry and a cultural history of confession, this book builds on previous Hopkins criticism by adopting a new approach informed by feminist and Foucauldian theory. With its analysis of the cultural conditions and power relations that sustained religious belief and poetic expression in the Victorian age, Confessing the Flesh offers new insights on the perennial question of Hopkins’s religious commitments. And with its examination of everything from theological treatises to Punch cartoons, Higgins’s exploration of Hopkins’s confessional modes uncovers the ways that gender and nation become implicated in confessional controversies and fleshly entanglements.

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