The Religious Significance of the Medieval Body and Flannery O'Connor's Fiction

Abstract

Flannery O'Connor based what she called her "anagogic vision" on the medieval way of seeing the world that allowed the reader of a text to discern "different levels of reality in one image or one situation." In my thesis I focus on the ways in which O'Connor revives this literary strategy and adapts it to address the modem cultural context. Accordingly, I examine in particular how her fiction engages Descartes' worship of consciousness and Nietzsche's supposition that "God is dead" by anagogically endowing her characters' bodies with two layers of signification. The first signified body is the spiritually-dead body, which belongs to the character who believes he is a god unto himself by virtue of his intellect. Since the character accepts his mind as his essence of being, his body appears in O'Connor's stories as the image of a soulless identity, a corpse. When the character recognizes the rightful place of the soul, the whole person emerges from the second signified body.

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Document Details

Document Type
Technical Report
Publication Date
Sep 23, 2002
Accession Number
ADA406673

Entities

People

  • Kenneth P. Novak

Organizations

  • University of Ottawa

Tags

Communities of Interest

  • Biomedical

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  • California
  • Christianity
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  • Lepidoptera
  • Medical Personnel
  • Personality
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  • Prosthetics
  • Psychological Phenomena And Processes
  • Psychology
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  • Religion

Fields of Study

  • Art

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  • Educational Psychology
  • Military History of the United States in the 20th Century.