Making Good: Creation, Creativity, and Artistry

Making Good: Creation, Creativity, and Artistry

by Trevor Hart
Making Good: Creation, Creativity, and Artistry

Making Good: Creation, Creativity, and Artistry

by Trevor Hart

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Overview

God spoke, and all that is and all that ever will be came into existence. God alone can be called uncreated and Creator, and creation can only accomplish that which already exists within God's imagination. In Making Good, Trevor Hart argues that human creativity is always a matter of unfolding the possibilities already latent within the original creative event.

Making Good contends that while humans must acknowledge the unique and incomparable dimensions of God's creative activity, the biblical theology of creation encourages rather than prohibits human creativity within a language of creation. Hart's basic contention is that the God known as the Father of Jesus Christ is no domineering deity who jealously seeks to protect his creative prerogatives, but one whose own creativity calls forth, inspires, and enables creative responses on the part of his human creatures.

Making Good blends biblical, historical, and systematic theology into conversation with philosophy, aesthetics, and developments in creative theory among the social sciences. Hart renders a theological account of human artistry and the wider human activities of making good.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781481303354
Publisher: Baylor University Press
Publication date: 10/15/2014
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 380
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

Trevor Hart is Revd Canon Professor at the University of St Andrews.

Table of Contents

1. Grammars of Creation

2. Creation, Imagination, and Artistry

3. Comparability and the Conscription of the Creaturely

4. Creation, Incomparability, and Otherness

5. Cosmos: A World (Not) of Our Own Making

6. Ethos: Give and Take in the Order of Signs

7. Response-able: Reality and Its (Mis)representations

8. Art, Mimesis, and Transformation

9. Origination, Image, and Autonomy

10. Imagination, Alterity, and Contradiction

11. Creativity, Art, and Originality

12. Creativity, Collaboration, and Accountability

13. Creativity, Gratuity, and Utility

14. Creativity, Christ, and Correlation

What People are Saying About This

Jeremy Begbie

Trevor Hart has distinguished himself over many years as an eminently sane, theologically acute, and immensely stimulating thinker. This volume is the result of many years of labour, and any with even a passing interest in artistic making will benefit enormously from the wisdom contained in its pages.

Richard Bauckham

Is creation something that only God the Creator does? Do artists just imitate creation, or compete with God as creators, or participate in God’s continuing creative work? These are the questions at the heart of Trevor Hart’s rich investigation, in which he draws on the Bible, the history of art, the history of ideas, philosophy, creativity studies and other resources to build a theological account of creativity in the arts. Making Good throws light on the doctrine of creation at the same time as it interrogates the nature of human creativity. It is likely to prove a landmark study in its field.

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