Northrop Frye:
Religious Visionary and Architect of the Spiritual World |
| Robert D. Denham |
| 320 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2299-2 $42.50 |
 |
Even the casual reader will notice a strong preoccupation with
religion in the work of Northrop Frye. In his latest book, however,
the esteemed Frye scholar Robert Denham shows that it played a
far greater role than has been assumedreligion was in fact
central to practically everything Frye wrote. Denham’s focus
shifts the emphasis from Anatomy of Criticism, Frye’s
most famous work, and places it on those works with which Frye
began and ended his careerthe early Fearful Symmetry
and, fifty years later, his two studies of the Bible and The
Double Vision. This reevaluation is based on a close examination
of Frye’s religiously charged language and aided by Denham’s
remarkable and unique access to Frye’s notebooks. The notebooks’
contents not only expand on ideas laid out in Frye’s published
works but also touch on subjects most readers would not associate
with Frye, such as his wide reading in both Eastern religious
texts and in esoteric traditions ranging from astrology to the
Cabala.
Denham does not attempt to distill a theology from Frye’s
work; rather, he seeks to trace the movement of Frye’s thought,
demonstrating the imaginative use to which he put his wide-ranging
reading. The result is a pivotal work, redefining our understanding
of one of the most important humanists of the twentieth century.
Robert D. Denham, John P. Fishwick Professor
Emeritus of English at Roanoke College, is the author or editor
of numerous books on Northrop Frye, including several volumes
of the Collected Works.