Towards Christianity without authority : pluralism, skepticism, and ecclesiastical power in selected examples of humorous Newfoundland writing

In recent decades in Newfoundland, a sustained interest in Christian symbols, stories, and values has been paired with increasing criticism of Christian religious institutions and agents. Newfoundland’s burgeoning tradition of professional humour has reflected this changing set of relationships to C...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Fralic, Michael Lloyd
Other Authors: Fiamengo, Janice, Nelson, Brent, Lynde, Denyse, Gingell, Susan, Epstein, Heidi
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Saskatchewan 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-02012007-153331
id ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/etd-02012007-153331
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK
op_collection_id ftusaskatchewan
language English
topic secularization
Skepticism
Ecclesiastical
Christianity
Pluralism
Pope and Princess Di
Berni Stapleton
Confessions of Nipper Mooney
Ed Smith
Young Triffie
From the Ashes of My Dreams
Ed Kavanagh
joke books
Ray Guy
satire
humour
Newfoundland
literature
Church
ecumenism
history
ecumenical
religion
spellingShingle secularization
Skepticism
Ecclesiastical
Christianity
Pluralism
Pope and Princess Di
Berni Stapleton
Confessions of Nipper Mooney
Ed Smith
Young Triffie
From the Ashes of My Dreams
Ed Kavanagh
joke books
Ray Guy
satire
humour
Newfoundland
literature
Church
ecumenism
history
ecumenical
religion
Fralic, Michael Lloyd
Towards Christianity without authority : pluralism, skepticism, and ecclesiastical power in selected examples of humorous Newfoundland writing
topic_facet secularization
Skepticism
Ecclesiastical
Christianity
Pluralism
Pope and Princess Di
Berni Stapleton
Confessions of Nipper Mooney
Ed Smith
Young Triffie
From the Ashes of My Dreams
Ed Kavanagh
joke books
Ray Guy
satire
humour
Newfoundland
literature
Church
ecumenism
history
ecumenical
religion
description In recent decades in Newfoundland, a sustained interest in Christian symbols, stories, and values has been paired with increasing criticism of Christian religious institutions and agents. Newfoundland’s burgeoning tradition of professional humour has reflected this changing set of relationships to Christianity. This robust young humour tradition richly reflects the ongoing pluralization and secularization of Newfoundland culture, and abundantly exemplifies humour’s distinctive potential as a means of addressing potentially contentious or vexing issues. Yet, surprisingly, literary criticism has almost entirely avoided the prominent stream of Newfoundland humour that addresses the island’s religious legacy.This project aims to begin to correct this substantial critical omission, examining points of continuity among a number of works produced over the past four decades. It focuses on the works’ embrace of political and/or epistemological pluralism, typically married to religious skepticism and to misgivings about conventional arrangements of religious power. Chapter One provides an historical and critical context for the project, introduces subsequent chapters, and speculates on ramifications of the pluralistic current that runs through the works in the study. Chapter Two examines religious jokes in Newfoundland joke books. It emphasizes the jokes’ overall tendency toward (an often ambiguous) religious conservatism, as well as the books’ latent pluralism regarding interdenominational relations. Chapter Three focuses on journalist and playwright Ray Guy’s often fierce satire of Christian religious agents and institutions. It argues that Guy’s satire utterly rejects the legitimacy of religious authority in the civic realm, largely on the grounds that transcendent truthfulness is often invoked as a means of justifying otherwise objectionable power. Chapter Four explores the ecumenical religious humour of columnist and memoirist Ed Smith. It focuses on Smith’s playful efforts to harmonize Christian faith and practice with a measure of religious uncertainty presented as a necessary foundation for humane coexistence. Chapter Five examines Ed Kavanagh’s novel The Confessions of Nipper Mooney. Primarily, it explicates and examines the novel’s liberal favouring of the individual moral conscience, and the symbolic association of its religiously dissident and/or marginalized protagonists with elements of the Catholic tradition. Chapter Six discusses Berni Stapleton’s comic play The Pope and Princess Di. The chapter emphasizes the play’s presentation of symbols’ constant subjection to alteration and hybridization, and its cautious regard for valuable symbols (religious or otherwise) that nonetheless become destructive when viewed as sacrosanct.Chapter Seven concludes the study by considering the works’ participation in political, philosophical, and literary/dramatic movements that problematize long-established religious modes and support a secular-pluralist outlook. It reflects on the role of humour in movements for change and on didacticism and popular humour as features of publicly engaged literature; it discusses other works of Newfoundland humour that approach religious matters from similarly secular, though less overtly political, angles; and it speculates on some social implications of the ascendancy of liberal, pluralistic values, considering these Newfoundland works in a more general Canadian cultural context.
author2 Fiamengo, Janice
Nelson, Brent
Lynde, Denyse
Gingell, Susan
Epstein, Heidi
format Thesis
author Fralic, Michael Lloyd
author_facet Fralic, Michael Lloyd
author_sort Fralic, Michael Lloyd
title Towards Christianity without authority : pluralism, skepticism, and ecclesiastical power in selected examples of humorous Newfoundland writing
title_short Towards Christianity without authority : pluralism, skepticism, and ecclesiastical power in selected examples of humorous Newfoundland writing
title_full Towards Christianity without authority : pluralism, skepticism, and ecclesiastical power in selected examples of humorous Newfoundland writing
title_fullStr Towards Christianity without authority : pluralism, skepticism, and ecclesiastical power in selected examples of humorous Newfoundland writing
title_full_unstemmed Towards Christianity without authority : pluralism, skepticism, and ecclesiastical power in selected examples of humorous Newfoundland writing
title_sort towards christianity without authority : pluralism, skepticism, and ecclesiastical power in selected examples of humorous newfoundland writing
publisher University of Saskatchewan
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-02012007-153331
long_lat ENVELOPE(-145.800,-145.800,-86.567,-86.567)
geographic Mooney
geographic_facet Mooney
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-02012007-153331
TC-SSU-02012007153331
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spelling ftusaskatchewan:oai:harvest.usask.ca:10388/etd-02012007-153331 2023-05-15T17:19:30+02:00 Towards Christianity without authority : pluralism, skepticism, and ecclesiastical power in selected examples of humorous Newfoundland writing Fralic, Michael Lloyd Fiamengo, Janice Nelson, Brent Lynde, Denyse Gingell, Susan Epstein, Heidi January 2007 http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-02012007-153331 en_US eng University of Saskatchewan http://hdl.handle.net/10388/etd-02012007-153331 TC-SSU-02012007153331 secularization Skepticism Ecclesiastical Christianity Pluralism Pope and Princess Di Berni Stapleton Confessions of Nipper Mooney Ed Smith Young Triffie From the Ashes of My Dreams Ed Kavanagh joke books Ray Guy satire humour Newfoundland literature Church ecumenism history ecumenical religion text Thesis 2007 ftusaskatchewan 2022-01-17T11:55:14Z In recent decades in Newfoundland, a sustained interest in Christian symbols, stories, and values has been paired with increasing criticism of Christian religious institutions and agents. Newfoundland’s burgeoning tradition of professional humour has reflected this changing set of relationships to Christianity. This robust young humour tradition richly reflects the ongoing pluralization and secularization of Newfoundland culture, and abundantly exemplifies humour’s distinctive potential as a means of addressing potentially contentious or vexing issues. Yet, surprisingly, literary criticism has almost entirely avoided the prominent stream of Newfoundland humour that addresses the island’s religious legacy.This project aims to begin to correct this substantial critical omission, examining points of continuity among a number of works produced over the past four decades. It focuses on the works’ embrace of political and/or epistemological pluralism, typically married to religious skepticism and to misgivings about conventional arrangements of religious power. Chapter One provides an historical and critical context for the project, introduces subsequent chapters, and speculates on ramifications of the pluralistic current that runs through the works in the study. Chapter Two examines religious jokes in Newfoundland joke books. It emphasizes the jokes’ overall tendency toward (an often ambiguous) religious conservatism, as well as the books’ latent pluralism regarding interdenominational relations. Chapter Three focuses on journalist and playwright Ray Guy’s often fierce satire of Christian religious agents and institutions. It argues that Guy’s satire utterly rejects the legitimacy of religious authority in the civic realm, largely on the grounds that transcendent truthfulness is often invoked as a means of justifying otherwise objectionable power. Chapter Four explores the ecumenical religious humour of columnist and memoirist Ed Smith. It focuses on Smith’s playful efforts to harmonize Christian faith and practice with a measure of religious uncertainty presented as a necessary foundation for humane coexistence. Chapter Five examines Ed Kavanagh’s novel The Confessions of Nipper Mooney. Primarily, it explicates and examines the novel’s liberal favouring of the individual moral conscience, and the symbolic association of its religiously dissident and/or marginalized protagonists with elements of the Catholic tradition. Chapter Six discusses Berni Stapleton’s comic play The Pope and Princess Di. The chapter emphasizes the play’s presentation of symbols’ constant subjection to alteration and hybridization, and its cautious regard for valuable symbols (religious or otherwise) that nonetheless become destructive when viewed as sacrosanct.Chapter Seven concludes the study by considering the works’ participation in political, philosophical, and literary/dramatic movements that problematize long-established religious modes and support a secular-pluralist outlook. It reflects on the role of humour in movements for change and on didacticism and popular humour as features of publicly engaged literature; it discusses other works of Newfoundland humour that approach religious matters from similarly secular, though less overtly political, angles; and it speculates on some social implications of the ascendancy of liberal, pluralistic values, considering these Newfoundland works in a more general Canadian cultural context. Thesis Newfoundland University of Saskatchewan: eCommons@USASK Mooney ENVELOPE(-145.800,-145.800,-86.567,-86.567)