Interpreting the Sacred in <em>As You Like It</em>: Reading the "Book of Nature" from a Christian, Ecocritical Perspective

Since the advent of the environmental crisis, some writers have raised concerns with the moral influence of Christian scripture and interpretive traditions, such as the medieval book of nature, a hermeneutic in which nature and scripture are "read" in reference to one another. Scripture, t...

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Main Author: Wendt, Candice Dee
Format: Others
Published: BYU ScholarsArchive 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/2325
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3324&amp;context=etd
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spelling ndltd-BGMYU2-oai-scholarsarchive.byu.edu-etd-33242019-05-16T03:21:28Z Interpreting the Sacred in <em>As You Like It</em>: Reading the "Book of Nature" from a Christian, Ecocritical Perspective Wendt, Candice Dee Since the advent of the environmental crisis, some writers have raised concerns with the moral influence of Christian scripture and interpretive traditions, such as the medieval book of nature, a hermeneutic in which nature and scripture are "read" in reference to one another. Scripture, they argue, has tended to stifle sacred relationships with nature as a non-human other. This thesis argues that such perspectives are reductive of the sacred quality of scripture. Environmental perspectives should be concerned with the desacralization of religious texts in addition to nature. Chapter one suggests that two questions surrounding the medieval book of nature's history can help us address ways that such perspectives reduce religious interpretation of sacred texts. The first question is the tension between manifestation and proclamation, or the question of how scripture and nature reveal sacred meanings. The second is the problem of evil, or the question of where evil and suffering come from. It also proposes that Shakespeare's As You Like It and religious philosophy, particularly Paul Ricoeur's writings, can help us address these problems and provide a contemporary religious perspective of the "book of nature." Drawing on scenes in the play in which nature is "read" as a book and Ricoeur's essay on "Manifestation and Proclamation," chapter two argues how manifestation often works interdependently with proclamation. Chapter three discusses how anthropocentric worldviews in which natural entities are exploited also distort interpretive relationships with scripture. Overcoming desacralization requires giving up desires to suppress contingencies, particularly suffering, in nature and in interpreting religious texts. Only as the characters in As You Like It accept contingencies are they able to engage hidden sources of hope, which is comparable to the need to let go of mastery in interpretation Ricoeur describes. Chapter four discusses problems with attempts to uncover the origins of the environmental crisis by discussing what Ricoeur writes about the problems with theodicy and Jean-Luc Marion's phenomenology of evil. Assumptions that specific human origins for evil can be blamed confirm deceptively human-centered worldviews and can mask valuable messages about how to morally respond to suffering that are taught in Judeo-Christian narratives. 2009-07-17T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/2325 https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3324&amp;context=etd http://lib.byu.edu/about/copyright/ All Theses and Dissertations BYU ScholarsArchive As You Like It book of nature Paul Ricoeur Figuring the Sacred ecocriticism environmentalism Albert Borgmann Power Failure: Christianity in the Culture of Technology Martin Heidegger The Question Concerning Technology The Anaximander Fragment Jean-Luc Marion Evil in Person logic of evil pastoral contingency ruach medieval exegesis ecotheology Manifestation and Proclamation the problem of evil Lynn White The Historical Roots of Our Ecological Crisis The Spell of the Sensuous Nature and Silence Classics Comparative Literature
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic As You Like It
book of nature
Paul Ricoeur
Figuring the Sacred
ecocriticism
environmentalism
Albert Borgmann
Power Failure: Christianity in the Culture of Technology
Martin Heidegger
The Question Concerning Technology
The Anaximander Fragment
Jean-Luc Marion
Evil in Person
logic of evil
pastoral
contingency
ruach
medieval exegesis
ecotheology
Manifestation and Proclamation
the problem of evil
Lynn White
The Historical Roots of Our Ecological Crisis
The Spell of the Sensuous
Nature and Silence
Classics
Comparative Literature
spellingShingle As You Like It
book of nature
Paul Ricoeur
Figuring the Sacred
ecocriticism
environmentalism
Albert Borgmann
Power Failure: Christianity in the Culture of Technology
Martin Heidegger
The Question Concerning Technology
The Anaximander Fragment
Jean-Luc Marion
Evil in Person
logic of evil
pastoral
contingency
ruach
medieval exegesis
ecotheology
Manifestation and Proclamation
the problem of evil
Lynn White
The Historical Roots of Our Ecological Crisis
The Spell of the Sensuous
Nature and Silence
Classics
Comparative Literature
Wendt, Candice Dee
Interpreting the Sacred in <em>As You Like It</em>: Reading the "Book of Nature" from a Christian, Ecocritical Perspective
description Since the advent of the environmental crisis, some writers have raised concerns with the moral influence of Christian scripture and interpretive traditions, such as the medieval book of nature, a hermeneutic in which nature and scripture are "read" in reference to one another. Scripture, they argue, has tended to stifle sacred relationships with nature as a non-human other. This thesis argues that such perspectives are reductive of the sacred quality of scripture. Environmental perspectives should be concerned with the desacralization of religious texts in addition to nature. Chapter one suggests that two questions surrounding the medieval book of nature's history can help us address ways that such perspectives reduce religious interpretation of sacred texts. The first question is the tension between manifestation and proclamation, or the question of how scripture and nature reveal sacred meanings. The second is the problem of evil, or the question of where evil and suffering come from. It also proposes that Shakespeare's As You Like It and religious philosophy, particularly Paul Ricoeur's writings, can help us address these problems and provide a contemporary religious perspective of the "book of nature." Drawing on scenes in the play in which nature is "read" as a book and Ricoeur's essay on "Manifestation and Proclamation," chapter two argues how manifestation often works interdependently with proclamation. Chapter three discusses how anthropocentric worldviews in which natural entities are exploited also distort interpretive relationships with scripture. Overcoming desacralization requires giving up desires to suppress contingencies, particularly suffering, in nature and in interpreting religious texts. Only as the characters in As You Like It accept contingencies are they able to engage hidden sources of hope, which is comparable to the need to let go of mastery in interpretation Ricoeur describes. Chapter four discusses problems with attempts to uncover the origins of the environmental crisis by discussing what Ricoeur writes about the problems with theodicy and Jean-Luc Marion's phenomenology of evil. Assumptions that specific human origins for evil can be blamed confirm deceptively human-centered worldviews and can mask valuable messages about how to morally respond to suffering that are taught in Judeo-Christian narratives.
author Wendt, Candice Dee
author_facet Wendt, Candice Dee
author_sort Wendt, Candice Dee
title Interpreting the Sacred in <em>As You Like It</em>: Reading the "Book of Nature" from a Christian, Ecocritical Perspective
title_short Interpreting the Sacred in <em>As You Like It</em>: Reading the "Book of Nature" from a Christian, Ecocritical Perspective
title_full Interpreting the Sacred in <em>As You Like It</em>: Reading the "Book of Nature" from a Christian, Ecocritical Perspective
title_fullStr Interpreting the Sacred in <em>As You Like It</em>: Reading the "Book of Nature" from a Christian, Ecocritical Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Interpreting the Sacred in <em>As You Like It</em>: Reading the "Book of Nature" from a Christian, Ecocritical Perspective
title_sort interpreting the sacred in <em>as you like it</em>: reading the "book of nature" from a christian, ecocritical perspective
publisher BYU ScholarsArchive
publishDate 2009
url https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/etd/2325
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3324&amp;context=etd
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