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The Artist and the Trinity aims to create a Christian theology of work based on Dorothy L. Sayers’ analogy of the Trinity to the process of artistic creation. Sayers’ analogy gives us an account of the person that does not collapse into the atomism of the individual of modern liberal capitalism, but is fully relational. By putting Sayers into dialogue with Alasdair MacIntyre, the book develops a fully Trinitarian theology of work that accounts for the interdependence of human beings, and for the ethical requirements of caring for the weak, the young, and the old in a way that is gender neutral.
”Dorothy Sayers was one of the bright stars of the
Anglo-Catholic literary firmament in England. . . . Among Sayers’s
great gifts was the ability to show the light orthodox Christian
doctrine sheds on both artistic ‘making’ and the everyday ‘doing’
for which we need ethics in a workaday world. Christine Fletcher’s
typically robust yet engaging study succeeds brilliantly in
demonstrating for a new generation what Sayers was about."
--Aidan Nichols
Blackfriars, Cambridge
“Professor Fletcher has written in an engaging style about a
neglected dimension of the contribution of Dorothy L. Sayers to
serious thinking about work (demolishing some myths about gender on
the way). Moreover, she confidently displays Sayers’s theological
versatility in being at once faithful to the Christian doctrine of
the Trinity, while illuminating it for the meaning of work, so
central to the lives of human beings."
--Ann Loades
University of Durham
"Karl Barth was right: Dorothy Sayers was one of the best and most
lucid lay theologians of the twentieth century, especially on that
difficult topic of the Trinity. Christine Fletcher has not only
given us a book on Sayers that is as clear and as illuminating as
the books by her subject; she has also done something more: she has
given us a practical theology. This is a book one can actually put
to work."
--Edward T. Oakes, SJ
University of St. Mary of the Lake
Christine M. Fletcher is an Associate Professor of Theology at Benedictine University, Lisle, Illinois. She is the author of numerous articles on the ethics of work and on Dorothy L. Sayers.
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