The Value of Solitude:
The Ethics and Spirituality of Aloneness in Autobiography |
| John D. Barbour |
| 240 pages, 6 x 9 |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2288-7 $49.50 |
| Paper ISBN 0-8139-2289-5 $19.50 |
Studies in
Religion and Culture
|
 |
Most people feel ambivalent about solitude, both loving and fearing
it depending on how they experience being alone at certain points
in their lives. In The Value of Solitude, John Barbour
explores some of the ways in which experiences of solitude, both
positive and negative, have been interpreted as religiously significant.
He also shows how solitude can raise ethical questions as writers
evaluate the virtues and dangers of aloneness and consider how
social interaction and withdrawal can most meaningfully be combined
in a life.
Barbour’s work differs from previous books about solitude
in two ways: it links solitude with ethics and spirituality, and
it approaches solitude by way of autobiography. Barbour ranges
from the early Christian and medieval periods to the twentieth
century in examining the varieties of solitary experience of writers
such as Augustine, Petrarch, Montaigne, Gibbon, Rousseau, Thoreau,
Thomas Merton, and Paul Auster. For many authors, the process
of writing an autobiography is itself conceived of as a form of
solitude, a detachment from others in order to discover or create
a new sense of personal identity. Solitude helps these authors
to reorient their lives according to their moral ideals and spiritual
aspirations.
The Value of Solitude both traces the persistence and
vitality of the theme of solitude in autobiography and shows how
the literary form and structure of autobiography are shaped by
ethical and religious reflection on aloneness. This work should
appeal to scholars in the fields of religious studies and theology,
to literary critics and specialists in autobiography, and to readers
interested in the experience of solitude and its moral and spiritual
significance.
John D. Barbour, Professor of Religion at St.
Olaf College, is the author of Versions
of Deconversion: Autobiography and the Loss of Faith.