000 01403cam a2200157 4500500
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041 _afre
042 _adc
100 1 0 _aHurley, Robert
_eauthor
245 0 0 _aLiterature and the spiritual life of children
260 _c2007.
500 _a60
520 _aWhat traces of Christian spirituality are to be found in literature intended for children and youth today? Broaching this question from a reception-critical stance, the author suggests that only readers knowledgeable about the Christian tradition are likely to find evidence of its spirituality in the books they read. Moving on to a consideration of the choice of narrative by the nascent church as the privileged vehicle for handing on its faith, the article intends to establish links within the reading event between the experience of interpretive freedom and the emergence of spiritual effects. Such spiritual effects may be understood as an expression of the reader’s quest for inner liberation. The article brings its brief exploration of the links between spirituality and interpretive freedom to a close with an examination of the hermeneutical significance of interpretive errors which may give rise to unexpected but welcome insights.
786 0 _nLumen Vitae | Volume LXII | 1 | 2007-01-01 | p. 47-65 | 0024-7324
856 4 1 _uhttps://shs.cairn.info/journal-lumen-vitae-2007-1-page-47?lang=en
999 _c185464
_d185464