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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Richard BellPublisher: Wipf & Stock Publishers Imprint: Wipf & Stock Publishers Dimensions: Width: 17.80cm , Height: 1.90cm , Length: 25.40cm Weight: 0.630kg ISBN: 9781498235723ISBN 10: 1498235727 Pages: 362 Publication Date: 21 January 2020 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviewsIn his two previous volumes on the music of Richard Wagner, Richard Bell demonstrated his grasp of his subject and the importance of his project not only for students of music but also for those in the humanities more generally. This volume continues the task of opening up for readers the importance of Wagner's towering presence in Western music. This book especially shows why embracing music, art, and literature is such a necessary broadening of the intellectual horizons of contemporary theological study. This original and pioneering study is required reading for all those seeking to understand better the challenges facing contemporary life and the contribution that Wagner's music can make to that task. --Christopher Rowland, Emeritus Dean Ireland's Professor of Exegesis of Holy Scripture, University of Oxford Richard H. Bell's new book argues that we can interpret Wagner's Ring cycle as a Christian allegory. Bell's meticulous scholarship dismantles the prejudice that Wagner's worldview was essentially non- or even anti-Christian, exploring the composer's relation to contemporary German philosophy, to Lutheran teaching, and to notes for a planned five-act opera on the life of Jesus. Clearly written and thoroughly researched, this is a book that will illumine, provoke, and even edify its readers. --George Pattison, Professor of Theology & Modern European Thought, University of Glasgow Applying a theological lens to familiar ground, Richard Bell argues in these volumes that Wagner's Ring cycle can be seen as a Christian allegory. Through a rich account of the composer's intellectual world, the author unpacks such classic theological concerns as nature and the fall; love, death, and immortality; freedom, necessity, and providence; and redemption--to the great benefit of both Wagnerians and theologians. --Stephen McClatchie, Professor of Theology & the Arts, Huron University College, London, Ontario In his two previous volumes on the music of Richard Wagner, Richard Bell demonstrated his grasp of his subject and the importance of his project not only for students of music but also for those in the humanities more generally. This volume continues the task of opening up for readers the importance of Wagner's towering presence in Western music. This book especially shows why embracing music, art, and literature is such a necessary broadening of the intellectual horizons of contemporary theological study. This original and pioneering study is required reading for all those seeking to understand better the challenges facing contemporary life and the contribution that Wagner's music can make to that task. --Christopher Rowland, Emeritus Dean Ireland's Professor of Exegesis of Holy Scripture, University of Oxford Richard H. Bell's new book argues that we can interpret Wagner's Ring cycle as a Christian allegory. Bell's meticulous scholarship dismantles the prejudice that Wagner's worldview was essentially non- or even anti-Christian, exploring the composer's relation to contemporary German philosophy, to Lutheran teaching, and to notes for a planned five-act opera on the life of Jesus. Clearly written and thoroughly researched, this is a book that will illumine, provoke, and even edify its readers. --George Pattison, Professor of Theology & Modern European Thought, University of Glasgow In his two previous volumes on the music of Richard Wagner, Richard Bell demonstrated his grasp of his subject and the importance of his project not only for students of music but also for those in the humanities more generally. This volume continues the task of opening up for readers the importance of Wagner's towering presence in Western music. This book especially shows why embracing music, art, and literature is such a necessary broadening of the intellectual horizons of contemporary theological study. This original and pioneering study is required reading for all those seeking to understand better the challenges facing contemporary life and the contribution that Wagner's music can make to that task. --Christopher Rowland, Emeritus Dean Ireland's Professor of Exegesis of Holy Scripture, University of Oxford Richard H. Bell's new book argues that we can interpret Wagner's Ring cycle as a Christian allegory. Bell's meticulous scholarship dismantles the prejudice that Wagner's worldview was essentially non- or even anti-Christian, exploring the composer's relation to contemporary German philosophy, to Lutheran teaching, and to notes for a planned five-act opera on the life of Jesus. Clearly written and thoroughly researched, this is a book that will illumine, provoke, and even edify its readers. --George Pattison, Professor of Theology & Modern European Thought, University of Glasgow Applying a theological lens to familiar ground, Richard Bell argues in these volumes that Wagner's Ring cycle can be seen as a Christian allegory. Through a rich account of the composer's intellectual world, the author unpacks such classic theological concerns as nature and the fall; love, death, and immortality; freedom, necessity, and providence; and redemption--to the great benefit of both Wagnerians and theologians. --Stephen McClatchie, Professor of Theology & the Arts, Huron University College, London, Ontario Author InformationRichard H. Bell is Professor of Theology at the University of Nottingham, UK. He studied theoretical physics at University College London and theology at Oxford and Tübingen. He is author of Provoked to Jealousy (1994), No one seeks for God (1998), The Irrevocable Call of God (2005), Deliver Us from Evil (2007), and Wagner's Parsifal (2013). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |