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Reading List
We asked members of the English department:
Name your favorite collections of poems by a contemporary and
a classic poet:
-The Collected Poems by Reynolds Price. Leaves of Grass by Walt Whitman.
Price's poetry "displays both a prodigious religious imagination
and as powerful an erotic sensibility as I have ever encountered
in literature. It is all done in a line-by-line execution that I
often find riveting." Whitman is "my favorite poet of all
time, for the vivacity of his imagery, the generosity of his spirit,
and the healing power of his vision. His ultimate achievement is
to reverse the psychology of man's fall through a compelling portrayal
of sex without guilt and death without fear."
--Victor Strandberg, professor of English
-The Best American Poetry series. Twenty
Love Poems and A Song of Despair by Pablo Neruda, translated by W.S. Merwin. The poetry
series that comes out annually "is almost always rewarding,
and I find poets I've not read before whom I want to know better.
But I have to admit I'm biased because, in the 2003 volume, there's
a poem by Daniel Nester, 'Poem for a Novelist Whom I Forced to
Write a Poem,' and I'm the novelist in question."
--Christina Askounis, University Writing Program
-The New and Selected Poems by Mary
Oliver. Paradise Lost by John Milton.†"Oliver's work
is beautifully lucid; Milton's is beautifully baroque. Anyone would
come away from either poet, or preferably from both, a far richer
person."
--Reynolds Price '55, James B. Duke Professor of English
On the Record
Many of the arguments made by opponents
of same-sex marriage have strongly religious dimensions. But
the definition of "religious tradition" can be slippery.
Conflicts over sexual identity are more public than ever with the
confirmation last year of the first openly gay bishop in the Episcopal
Church and recent efforts to legalize same-sex marriage. Opponents
to these impending changes share a rationale. Be it a notion of
what marriage "has always been" or what the church and
the Bible have always said about sexuality, a common theme in arguments
against ordination of gays and same-sex marriage is an appeal to "the
tradition."
Of course, religious communities require tradition. We would be
foolish to ignore the wisdom of experience--to constantly "reinvent
the wheel." However, appeals to tradition often cover up ignorance
of history. We have not always done it that way. The church has
changed its mind on most topics, sexuality being a prime example.
Historically, acts condemned as unnatural or "sodomic" included
practices most Christians now accept, such as masturbation, sex
not for procreation, fellatio, cunnilingus, and artificial contraception.
Many views can be called "biblical," from stoning for
adultery to what appears to be cohabitation without benefit of
clergy (Adam and Eve).
Traditions of marriage in the U.S. have changed, too. In colonial
days, marriage was an economic and political arrangement between
families. For centuries in the South, it was a legal privilege
defined by whiteness. One of the most enduring traditions of marriage
was the husband's right to his wife's body. Even that changed when
the marital rape exemption was finally removed in the 1980s.
Any appeal to tradition will be selective. If wise, it will recognize
the fallibility of the past and move to the important question:
why any particular decision of the past deserves normative status
today. That it is "tradition" is neither a case for making
heterosexuality a qualification for marriage or ordination, nor
for granting it moral superiority. The Vermont Supreme Court's
1999 Baker decision allowing for civil unions gets the fallibility
of traditions just right: "The past provides many instances
where the law refused to see a human being when it should have." The
church should be so wise.
--Mary McClintock Fulkerson M.Div. '77, associate
professor of theology in the Divinity School. |