In the first book to consider the study of world religion and world literature in concert, Zhange Ni proposes a new reading strategy that she calls -pagan criticism, - which she applies not only to late twentieth- and early twenty-first-century literary texts that engage the global resurgence of religion but also to the very concepts of religion and the secular. Focusing on two North American writers (the Jewish American Cynthia Ozick and the Canadian Margaret Atwood) and two East Asian writers (the Japanese Endō Shūsaku and the Chinese Gao Xingjian), Ni reads their fiction,...
In the first book to consider the study of world religion and world literature in concert, Zhange Ni proposes a new reading strategy that she calls...
In the first book to consider the study of world religion and world literature in concert, Zhange Ni proposes a new reading strategy that she calls -pagan criticism, - which she applies not only to late twentieth- and early twenty-first-century literary texts that engage the global resurgence of religion but also to the very concepts of religion and the secular. Focusing on two North American writers (the Jewish American Cynthia Ozick and the Canadian Margaret Atwood) and two East Asian writers (the Japanese Endō Shūsaku and the Chinese Gao Xingjian), Ni reads their fiction,...
In the first book to consider the study of world religion and world literature in concert, Zhange Ni proposes a new reading strategy that she calls...