University Press Copublishing Division / Fairleigh Dickinson University Press
Pages: 310
Trim: 6⅜ x 9½
978-1-61147-064-2 • Hardback • December 2010 • $128.00 • (£98.00)
978-1-61147-620-0 • Paperback • May 2013 • $68.99 • (£53.00)
978-1-61147-065-9 • eBook • December 2010 • $65.50 • (£50.00)
Paul E. Kerry is an associate professor of history at Brigham Young University, research associate at Corpus Christi College and visiting fellow at the Woolf Institute, Cambridge.
Chapter 1 Introduction
Part 2 Part I: The Ring
Chapter 3 The Pagan Tolkien
Chapter 4 The Christian Tolkien: A Response to Ronald Hutton
Chapter 5 The Entwives: Investigating the Spritual Core ofLord of the Rings
Chapter 6 "Like Heathen Kings:" Religion as Palimpsest in Tolkien's Fiction
Chapter 7 Confronting the World's Weirdness: J. R. R. Tolkien'sThe Children of Hurin
Chapter 8 Eru Erased: The Minimalist Cosmology ofThe Lord of the Rings
Chapter 9 The Ring and the Cross: How J. R. R. Tolkien Became a Christian Writer
Part 10 Part II: The Cross
Chapter 11 Redeeming Sub-Creation
Chapter 12 Catholic Scholar, Catholic Sub-Creator
Chapter 13 "An Age Comes On:" J. R. R. Tolkien and the English Catholic Sense of History
Chapter 14 The Lord of the Rings and the Catholic Understanding of Community
Chapter 15 Tracking Catholic Influence inThe Lord of the Rings
Chapter 16 Saintly and Distant Mothers
Chapter 17 The "Last Battle" as a Johannine Ragnarok: Tolkien and the Universal
As a contribution to a—if not the—polemical area of Tolkien studies, The Ring and the Cross is commendable not only for looking at both sides, but also for reflecting those many shades in between where most opinions fall. The collection’s civility and single-volume format more than likely belie the true friction and disparity of opinions on its topic, but the willingness to publish together is at least a willingness to engage one another, and that can never be a bad thing.
— Mythlore
Not only does the collection capture the theological traditions and complexity of Tolkien’s written world, The Ring and the Cross further promotes the cross-pollination of religious studies and literary criticism, aptly showing both disciplines more than merely interrelated. Indeed, what The Ring and the Cross demonstrates is that the theological underpinnings of a literary work are indispensable to thoroughly responsible criticism. In the case of Tolkien’s chef-d’oeuvre, if Kerry’s diagnosis of contemporary Tolkien scholarship is correct— that ‘all signs seem to indicate that Tolkien’s writing will continue to provoke, inspire, and provide rich food for thought about its relation to religions and spirituality generally, and Christianity in particular.’—thenThe Ring and the Cross should continue to carry the Ring into even deeper recesses of religion-literary criticism.
— The Journal of the Fantastic in the Arts
Professor Paul E. Kerry’s ambitious project – to bring together leading academic voices in the burgeoning area of Tolkien Studies to debate and explore the influence of Christianity on Tolkien’s works is a success. Fourteen scholars of literature, theology, history, political science, and philosophy have contributed to Kerry’s volume, lending it an interdisciplinary (and inter-confessional) range and depth that is unique for a work dealing with these particular questions. It should be read by any fans or students of Tolkien – Christian or otherwise, from university professors to mature high schoolers seeking a rigorous gateway into a deeper grasp and appreciation of one of the greatest storytellers in the English language. . . .This collection of essays feature many other relevant debates and discussions that are well worth the time of a casual fan of Tolkien who seeks to learn more, or of a seasoned student or scholar deepening their knowledge and study of a profound corpus of writing.
— Journal of Inklings Studies
While the relationship between Tolkien's personal religious convictions and his fictional works has been explored in the past, this collection now brings together many of the common arguments and approaches, situating them in context with one another and offering the reader a. . .cohesive view of the conversation. . . .Christian readers and scholars interested in Tolkien's Middle-earth fictions, or of the relationship between myth-making and person religious faith in general, will find this anthology accessible, useful, and thought-provoking.
— Christianity and Literature