Warren's in-depth study covers her scholarship on Walker over the last 30 years. Writing that Walker had an "early inclination toward mysticism,” Warren (Emory Univ.) explores Walker’s unique view of the spiritual by analyzing both her published and unpublished work. Warren claims Walker as a “spiritual theologian” who finds a way to show the transformative nature of humanity through characters who care about the world and the people in it. In the book's ten chapters Warren explores connections between Walker's mysticism and the various topics that interested her, including poverty, emotional development, civil rights, and religion. Valuable to those interested in a deeper look at Walker’s personal spiritual beliefs, this book joins a conversation Warren began in her edited volume Alice Walker (2013). Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty.
After a full career of academic research and teaching Alice Walker’s work, Nagueyalti Warren has produced a thorough, illuminating, and resonant analysis of Walker’s metaphysical imagination. Warren’s book heightens the understanding of Walker’s complex literary sensibility.
Nagueyalti Warren carefully examines Alice Walker’s reading history, the archival records of how Walker composed her works in various genres, and how contemporary students respond to the issues Walker raises—all to build and refine a strong case that Walker is anything but a dabbler in new-age superficialities. Warren’s Walker is a seriously sermonizing pagan, a profoundly and consistently mystical maker of literature. Warren’s analyses of the famous story “Everyday Use” and of The Color Purple are especially useful.
Alice Walker’s Metaphysics: Literature of Spirit by Nagueyalti Warren (Emory University) revisits Walker’s entire canon through close and contextualized readings, grounded in Warren’s assertion that Walker is a mystic and that her works must be understood through the framework of Walker’s spirituality. Warren’s original analyses challenge conventional readings of several of Walker’s novels, poetry, and essay collections. A particularly valuable contribution of Warren’s work to the field of Walker studies is her incorporation of material from Walker’s personal papers in her comprehensive study.
Warren's in-depth study covers her scholarship on Walker over the last 30 years. Writing that Walker had an "early inclination toward mysticism,” Warren (Emory Univ.) explores Walker’s unique view of the spiritual by analyzing both her published and unpublished work. Warren claims Walker as a “spiritual theologian” who finds a way to show the transformative nature of humanity through characters who care about the world and the people in it. In the book's ten chapters Warren explores connections between Walker's mysticism and the various topics that interested her, including poverty, emotional development, civil rights, and religion. Valuable to those interested in a deeper look at Walker’s personal spiritual beliefs, this book joins a conversation Warren began in her edited volume AliceWalker (2013). Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty.
In Alice Walker’s Metaphysics, Warren astutely recognizes in Walker’s eclectic body of work a knowing that is beyond a centrist’s understanding of religions and theologies, indeed a spiritual knowing that occupies expanding circles of mysticism.
Alice Walker’s Metaphysics is a comprehensive and intensive study of the author’s fiction, essays, and poetry not only as art, but also as remedy to ills of injustice and immorality. Through consistent and meticulous inquiry, Nagueyalti Warren elucidates the spiritual underpinnings of Walker’s work and concludes, “only justice for every living thing will save humankind. A single savior will not be the redeemer.” This is a brilliant book that moves from the stale and inhuman idea of literary criticism by making central our real human need for literature.
Warren's in-depth study covers her scholarship on Walker over the last 30 years. Writing that Walker had an "early inclination toward mysticism," Warren (Emory Univ.) explores Walker's unique view of the spiritual by analyzing both her published and unpublished work. Warren claims Walker as a "spiritual theologian" who finds a way to show the transformative nature of humanity through characters who care about the world and the people in it. In the book's ten chapters Warren explores connections between Walker's mysticism and the various topics that interested her, including poverty, emotional development, civil rights, and religion. Valuable to those interested in a deeper look at Walker's personal spiritual beliefs, this book joins a conversation Warren began in her edited volume AliceWalker (2013). Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty.
After a full career of academic research and teaching Alice Walker's work, Nagueyalti Warren has produced a thorough, illuminating, and resonant analysis of Walker's metaphysical imagination. Warren's book heightens the understanding of Walker's complex literary sensibility.
Alice Walker's Metaphysics is a comprehensive and intensive study of the author's fiction, essays, and poetry not only as art, but also as remedy to ills of injustice and immorality. Through consistent and meticulous inquiry, Nagueyalti Warren elucidates the spiritual underpinnings of Walker's work and concludes, "only justice for every living thing will save humankind. A single savior will not be the redeemer." This is a brilliant book that moves from the stale and inhuman idea of literary criticism by making central our real human need for literature.
Alice Walker's Metaphysics: Literature of Spirit by Nagueyalti Warren (Emory University) revisits Walker's entire canon through close and contextualized readings, grounded in Warren's assertion that Walker is a mystic and that her works must be understood through the framework of Walker's spirituality. Warren's original analyses challenge conventional readings of several of Walker's novels, poetry, and essay collections. A particularly valuable contribution of Warren's work to the field of Walker studies is her incorporation of material from Walker's personal papers in her comprehensive study.
In Alice Walker's Metaphysics, Warren astutely recognizes in Walker's eclectic body of work a knowing that is beyond a centrist's understanding of religions and theologies, indeed a spiritual knowing that occupies expanding circles of mysticism.
Nagueyalti Warren carefully examines Alice Walker's reading history, the archival records of how Walker composed her works in various genres, and how contemporary students respond to the issues Walker raises--all to build and refine a strong case that Walker is anything but a dabbler in new-age superficialities. Warren's Walker is a seriously sermonizing pagan, a profoundly and consistently mystical maker of literature. Warren's analyses of the famous story "Everyday Use" and of The Color Purple are especially useful.
Warren's in-depth study covers her scholarship on Walker over the last 30 years. Writing that Walker had an "early inclination toward mysticism,” Warren (Emory Univ.) explores Walker’s unique view of the spiritual by analyzing both her published and unpublished work. Warren claims Walker as a “spiritual theologian” who finds a way to show the transformative nature of humanity through characters who care about the world and the people in it. In the book's ten chapters Warren explores connections between Walker's mysticism and the various topics that interested her, including poverty, emotional development, civil rights, and religion. Valuable to those interested in a deeper look at Walker’s personal spiritual beliefs, this book joins a conversation Warren began in her edited volume Alice Walker (2013). Summing Up: Recommended. Lower-division undergraduates through faculty.