Full size book cover of G.K. Chesterton}

G.K. Chesterton

Michael D. Hurley

4.5(4 readers)
Novelist, essayist, poet, playwright, historian, journalist, Christian apologist, literary and social critic, G.K. Chesterton was one of the most protean and prolific writers of his age, perhaps of any age. Bernard Shaw called him a 'colossal genius'. Most readers have certainly found him too big to see whole, and have therefore cut him in half. The 'poet' is severed from the philosopher; he is treated either as a phrase-maker or as a mystic; his quirky writings are enjoyed as an aesthetic end in themselves, or they are praised for their contribution to theology. In this close reading of his work, Michael D. Hurley brings Chesterton's divided selves together. Covering the full range of his diverse genres, Hurley shows how Chesterton thinks through language, in ways that confound attempts to read him as a thinker without first appreciating him as a writer.

Publisher

Liverpool University Press

Publication Date

2/20/2012

ISBN

9780746312100

Pages

144

Categories

About the Author

Portrait of author Michael D. Hurley
Michael D. Hurley
Hurley is Professor of Literature and Theology at the University of Cambridge, where he has worked since 2005.

As a boy, he was schooled at Stonyhurst College, a gothic pile in rural Lancashire, sometime nursery for saints as well as soldiers, and with enough flinty spirit still to light the imagination of an adolescent with a romantic turn of mind. His late father left his village school in Ireland when he was only twelve, but he loved and told powerful stories, and Hurley inherited that love, which was spurred by an exceptional teacher at Stonyhurst, and continues to characterise his approach to literature. Whereas contemporary literary criticism is often marked by a so-called ‘hermeneutics of suspicion’ — bent on exposing what’s limited or bigoted about a given text — Hurley believes there is more profit (and pleasure) in exploring what Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn once called art’s ‘secret inner light’; that is, its goodness, truth, and beauty.

After school, Hurley followed a decently straight line through my studies, but also struck out beyond the beaten bounds of the library and the classroom. He worked for two separate years in Japan and Romania, in the latter country while it was suffering extreme hardship following the overthrow of Nicolae Ceaușescu; and in the same period he also helped deliver aid through Croatia, in the immediate wake of its War of Independence.

As an undergraduate Hurley read for a four year MA at St Andrews, taking Honours in English, but also studying Classics and Philosophy; playing rugby for the University was its own education. His PhD at Cambridge was on the pyrotechnical poetry of Gerard Manley Hopkins, and when not working away at his doctorate – tumbling down the rabbit hole of prosodic theory, or so it seemed – he spent a chunk of my weekends and evenings in a barracks, and on the wind-swept Brecon Beacons, undergoing selection and training with the 21st Special Air Service Regiment, a reserve special forces unit of the army.

After his PhD, Hurley gained a Fellowship at Cambridge, where he has stayed since, while also taking refreshing advantage of sabbatical stints abroad (with his wife and three daughters) — as a Visiting Scholar in the English Department at Harvard, for instance; and most recently, in Savannah, Georgia, helping to establish a new university, Ralston College.

Hurley's research focuses on literary style and form, and on literature’s interrelations with philosophy and theology. He was the Interdisciplinary Fellow in Philosophy at CRASSH in 2018, and a Visiting Fellow at All Souls College, Oxford, in Trinity term 2021. Recent books include a study of religious poets from William Blake to T. S. Eliot, a revaluation of the genius of G. K. Chesterton, and an introduction to Poetic Form.

Above all, Hurley's scholarly interests are directed towards ultimate questions and questions of value; and in this vein, he also frequently writes, gives talks and public lectures for a non-academic audience, on the great ideas and works of art and literature that shape the way we understand ourselves and the world.

Hurley is a Trustee of The Christian Heritage Centre, believing passionately in the importance of remembering and recovering, as well as critically engaging, ‘the fine things that were thought and done by our forebears’.

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