
Subject
1.00 Credit
Full Year
We live in a world of paradoxes: Light and Dark, Good and Evil, Spirit and Body, Reason and Emotion. Our God is a God of paradoxes--God became flesh and dwelt among us; He died but rose again. Also, He gave us a way to comprehend these seeming contradictions: our imagination. "Imagination both expresses and trains the reason and the will" said Vigen Guroian in Rallying the Really Human Things. We tend to think of the imaginings of children as quaint and silly, but in reality, they are engaged in the act of comprehending the paradoxes of our world. In a sin-filled world that is so large and full of complexity, fairy stories allow us to step “further up and further in” to smaller worlds, with sharper edges and more clearly-defined boundaries. In stories of magic beyond reality, of impossible virtue, perfect evil, and other-worldly creatures we can see allegories of our fallenness, our God, and His miracles. These imagined places delight our souls because we see His Glory through them as through a window.
In this course, we will journey through several great works of literature seeking after the Truth hidden within all things--otherwise known as the Ideal Type, natural law, objective truth, the Tao... We will start with a study of classic fairy tales which simply shine with virtues, vices, and lessons to be gleaned, before we head into classic works of fiction, ready to mine for the same shards of Truth. Then, we may begin to create our own stories. "Art is the imitation of nature achieved through the synthesizing, ordering, and illumining work of the imagination," Guroian aptly states.
This 32-week course will be held in 4, 8-week quarters. Students will be required to complete weekly readings before attending our weekly lecture and recitation. There will be two exams, two fairy tales, and multiple short essays. A commonplace book is required for this class.*
*See link below