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The Oxford Movement The Oxford Movement
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Dress Rehearsal Dress Rehearsal
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The Ritual Sentiment The Ritual Sentiment
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Church and Stage Church and Stage
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Holy and Unholy Orders Holy and Unholy Orders
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Notes Notes
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Further Reading Further Reading
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30 Theology: Decadent Aesthetics, Anglo-Catholicism, and Ritual
Get accessMatthew Bradley is Lecturer in English at the University of Liverpool. His research primarily focuses on Victorian culture and religion. His publications include the Oxford University Press World’s Classics edition of William James’s The Varieties of Religious Experience (2012), and a co-edited collection of essays, Reading and the Victorians (Ashgate 2014). He is currently writing a history of Victorian imaginings of the end of the world.
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Published:13 October 2021
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Abstract
Anglo-Catholicism, the nineteenth-century movement within the Church of England that sought to reassert many of the forms and rituals of Roman Catholicism, exerted a significant shaping influence upon the religious aesthetics of English decadent writing. While the space that Anglo-Catholicism offered for a decadent performance of sexual difference has been examined before, this article offers a complementary argument, emphasizing a strand within decadence arising from the role of personality in reconceptualizing, and possibly distorting, religious orthodoxy. The first part provides a history of the discourse of degeneracy around the early Oxford Movement and the mediation of Anglo-Catholic ideas into English decadence through the writings of Walter Pater. It then discusses the ways in which decadent writing in England explored a distorting excess of personality through the aesthetics of religious ritual and asceticism.
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