Dorothy L. Sayers' Theology of Work
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"Christine Fletcher firmly steers her readers into taking very seriously as a theologian and a fighter for social theology someone whom they may know only as an outstandingly good writer of detective fiction in her own era and translator and commentator on Dante's Divine Comedy. ... Reading Fletcher on Sayers and MacIntyre is a refreshing way of engaging with the discrimination of justice in a complex world." -Ann Loades, Theology vol.118, issue 2, 2015 "This well-argued book ... shows Sayers's views on creativity and work, placed within a Christian context, are as relevant now as they were during her life time - and possibly more so." -Maggie Hamand, Journal of Theological Studies, vol 66 issue 1, April 2015 "This excellent book prompted me to reflect that it is easy for those of us in ministry, encouraged perhaps by managerialist ecclesiastical bureacracies, to view our own work as a set of outcomes to be achieved and problems to be solved over such issues as numerical growth, money, and buildings. But Sayers provides us with another way of conceiving it: as a work of artistic creativity." -Reverend Dr Edward Dowler, Church Times 29th May 2015 "This text is a significant contribution to scholarship pn Sayers and theological ethics in general and is accesible to all levels of theological study." -Taylor Worley, Theological Book Review, Vol. 26 No.2, 2016 This is a good book to read if you've never heard of Sayers, if you already love one aspect of her work (as novelist, playwright, or theologian), or even if you are familiar with all of her work.' - Jennifer Woodruff Tait, Diversity, Future of the Movement, Resource Reviews
Christine M. Fletcher is Associate Professor of Theology at Benedictine University, Lisle, Illinois. She is the author of numerous articles on the ethics of work and on Dorothy L. Sayers.
Foreword Introduction 1 Sayers' Life and Work 2 Imaginative writing: showing not telling 3 Sayers' Wartime Writing 4 The Artist and the Trinity 5 Good Work