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Brideshead Revisited....anyone? I don't get it!

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RoseofLima

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Okay...so this book is on the book list for my senior British Lit class. I don't know how or why I haven't read it until now.:scratch:

I love it, like love it in the way I loved Fitzgerald why I first read him. Sometimes the language is so exquisitly beautiful, I nearly weep.

HOWEVER....(I am just starting Book II, so perhaps the end will make it more clear??) why in the heck is this book considered "Catholic" the way it is in Catholic circles?? The heros are all homosexuals (they are fab heros and I love them dearly) and the Catholics are gruesome...

For those of you who've read it---what gives??? Why is this novel considered so Catholic?
 

Filia Mariae

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RoseofLima said:
Okay...so this book is on the book list for my senior British Lit class. I don't know how or why I haven't read it until now.:scratch:

I love it, like love it in the way I loved Fitzgerald why I first read him. Sometimes the language is so exquisitly beautiful, I nearly weep.

HOWEVER....(I am just starting Book II, so perhaps the end will make it more clear??) why in the heck is this book considered "Catholic" the way it is in Catholic circles?? The heros are all homosexuals (they are fab heros and I love them dearly) and the Catholics are gruesome...

For those of you who've read it---what gives??? Why is this novel considered so Catholic?

You'll get it more when you finish it, although I kind of wondered that myself...
 
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Michie

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Evelyn Waugh--Catholic Convert & Writer



Evelyn Waugh was born in England in A.D. 1903, son of a devout Anglican churchman who led an exemplary life and attended church regularly. Although his father never promoted any special interest in theology, Waugh aspired to become a clergyman for the Church of England very early in his childhood.

While his schoolmates devoted their time and energy to such hobbies as model trains and sports, Waugh was most interested in church affairs. He was fond of speaking of such things as chasubles and Erastianism.
The church appealed to him mainly for aesthetic reasons. The medieval cathedrals and churches, the rich ceremonies that surrounded the monarchy, the historic cities like Canterbury and York, the social organization of the parishes, and the traditional culture of Oxford and Cambridge Universities were some of the main reasons that the Church of England appealed to Waugh as a boy. He also liked the Anglican liturgy, which was still recited in the original old English.
He was very aware of the Catholic Church as a boy, but it was not nearly as appealing to him. Catholics in England met in cheap modern buildings, ugly by Anglican standards, and were served mainly by Irish missionaries who were fond of simple living. And besides, Waugh was born Anglican, not Catholic. So as a boy, being a Catholic was far from his mind.
Because of his enthusiasm for serving the Church of England, his parents sent him to the grammar school which taught young boys who were interested in entering the seminary. Once there, he lost all faith he had in any religion. He became what is known as an atheist, one who believes there is no God. He had lost his boyhood faith because his religion teacher claimed that none of the books of the Bible were written by their supposed authors.
Waugh admitted in an autobio-graphy years later that he thought if he had been a Catholic boy at a Catholic school he would have found that his teachers straightened him out immediately. He also wrote that if he had been receiving the sacraments of the Catholic Church, he would not have abandoned his faith in God. But the teachers at the Anglican school simply dismissed his unbelief, saying the boy was just "going through a phase."

Continued- http://www.aquinas-multimedia.com/stjoseph/biography.html
 
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Michie

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"Catholic author"
Thus, Evelyn Waugh has become known to history as a "Catholic author." His novels after his conversion began to reflect a more serious worldview, as seen in the religious theme of his most famous work, Brideshead Revisited (A.D. 1945). He continued to travel widely throughout Europe, Africa, Asia and the Americas. In addition to writing many novels, he also wrote several biographies. One of these was Edmund Campion: Priest & Martyr, which became the first significant story about this Elizabethan Jesuit martyr. Some believe the Waugh biography aided in the canonization of Campion.
He died in A.D.1966, known as a brilliant satirist—one of the funniest writers of the 20th century. Beyond that, Waugh was known as a faithful Christian pilgrim.
 
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Michie

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Well I've yet to read it myself but it has peaked my interest. As some said, continue reading & it may unfold.

But I have noticed that Catholic writers, especially those of the past, their literary work is considered Catholic also, regardless of subject.
 
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RoseofLima

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Oh goodness no- it was written in 1944.... It reads a lot like Fitzgerald, though not so gloomy and star crossed as Fitzy.

I'll have read the whole thing in about 5 days (with 4 kids, 2 jobs, housework, trying to save my marriage, and religious obligations). So it is a quick read, too. Very accesssible language- you don't need to struggle with it--like a Henry James of a Faulkner novel..or good heavens like that scourge Joyce....
 
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Michie

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RoseofLima said:
Oh goodness no- it was written in 1944.... It reads a lot like Fitzgerald, though not so gloomy and star crossed as Fitzy.

I'll have read the whole thing in about 5 days (with 4 kids, 2 jobs, housework, trying to save my marriage, and religious obligations). So it is a quick read, too. Very accesssible language- you don't need to struggle with it--like a Henry James of a Faulkner novel..or good heavens like that scourge Joyce....

Thank you! I'll be going to the library Monday. I think you are the second person that has mentioned this work & it has really peaked my interest.

:)
 
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