Understanding Marilynne Robinson

Understanding Marilynne Robinson by Alex Engebretson, published by University of South Carolina Press in 2020, is a comprehensive study of the acclaimed Midwestern author known for her fiction and nonfiction. This edition, consisting of 168 pages, provides an overview of Robinson’s life, themes, and literary and religious influences, focusing on her notable works, including her celebrated novels and essays.
Readers will find a detailed examination of Robinson’s literary contributions, including her dialogue with liberal Protestantism and the influence of nineteenth-century American literature. The study begins with her debut novel, Housekeeping, and explores her later works, such as Gilead, Home, and Lila, which address significant American themes like race and the complexities of sin and grace. Engebretson also delves into Robinson’s nonfiction, showcasing her intellectual range across various subjects, including contemporary science-religion debates and the fate of liberal democracy.
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A comprehensive study of the award-winning Midwestern author of fiction and nonfiction
Alex Engebretson offers the first comprehensive study of Marilynne Robinson’s fiction and essays to date, providing an overview of the author’s life, themes, and literary and religious influences. Understanding Marilynne Robinson examines this author of three highly acclaimed novels and recipient of the National Book Critics Circle Award for fiction, the Pulitzer Prize for fiction, the Orange Prize for fiction, and the National Humanities Medal. Through close readings of the novels and essay collections, Engebretson uncovers the unifying elements of Robinson’s work: a dialogue with liberal Protestantism, an emphasis on regional settings, the marked influence of nineteenth-century American literature, and the theme of home.
The study begins with Housekeeping, Robinson’s haunting debut novel, which undertakes a feminist revision of the Western genre. Twenty-four years later Robinson began a literary project that would bring her national recognition, three novels set in a small, rural Iowa town. The first was Gilead, which took up the major American themes of race, the legacy of the Civil War, and the tensions between secular and religious lives. Two more Gilead novels followed, Home and Lila, both of which display Robinson’s gift for capturing the mysterious dynamics of sin and grace.
In Understanding Marilynne Robinson, Engebretson also reviews her substantial body of non-fiction, which demonstrates a dazzling intellectual range, from the contemporary science-religion debates, to Shakespeare, to the fate of liberal democracy. Throughout this study Engebretson makes the argument for Marilynne Robinson as an essential, deeply unfashionable, visionary presence within today’s literary scene.
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