eprintid: 10006630
rev_number: 17
eprint_status: archive
userid: 587
dir: disk0/00/00/66/30
datestamp: 2011-03-22 10:27:33
lastmod: 2017-12-07 21:16:28
status_changed: 2011-03-31 16:01:48
type: thesis
metadata_visibility: show
item_issues_count: 0
creators_name: Pridmore, John Stuart
title: Transfiguring fantasy : spiritual development in the work of George MacDonald
ispublished: unpub
divisions: B14
keywords: spiritual development; George MacDonald; nature; childhood; imagination
note: Thesis: (PhD) University of London Institute of Education, 2000.
abstract: This study addresses two questions. What light does the work of George MacDonald shed
on the concept of 'spiritual development' and what is the pedagogical function of his
fantasy? The thesis is largely concerned to clarify these conceptual issues but the reason for
raising them is practical. The promotion of spiritual development in schools is a statutory
requirement. The conclusions of this thesis contain implications for curricular strategies for
meeting that requirement and attention will be drawn to them.
Two major claims are made. The first concerns the issue of whether a coherent spirituality
necessarily depends on - and thus must be promoted within - a religious framework. The
implication of MacDonald's recourse to fantasy, a discourse dispensing with traditional
religious categories, to explore the theme of spiritual development is that a spiritual
pedagogy does not need to be rooted in traditional religious concepts and truth-claims. The
two discourses, the 'theistic' and the 'non-theistic', are compatible and complementary.
Secondly, the concept of 'transfiguring fantasy' is introduced and commended.
MacDonald's transfiguring fantasy functions pedagogically, as potentially does all such
unclosed flmtasy, by calling in question the distinction between the narrative one reads and
one's own life-story. The two realms, those of the text in one's hands and the life one is
leading, elide and the task of resolving the enigmas of the fantasy becomes one with the
unfinished business of making sense of one's own story.
This thesis also considers the familiar Romantic themes of nature, childhood and the
imagination, which MacDonald treats with original insight. Nature is akin to fantasy in its
capacity to engage and direct the attentive spirit. Childhood is the pattern of what we must
become. The imagination's role is to summon us to press beyond the borders of what may
be scientifically proven or rationally articulated.
date: 2000
date_type: completed
official_url: http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.343961
oa_status: green
thesis_class: doctoral_open
language: eng
primo: open
primo_central: open_green
full_text_status: public
pages: 273
institution: Institute of Education, University of London
thesis_type: Doctoral
citation:        Pridmore, John Stuart;      (2000)    Transfiguring fantasy : spiritual development in the work of George MacDonald.                   Doctoral thesis , Institute of Education, University of London.     Green open access   
 
document_url: https://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/id/eprint/10006630/1/DX220760.pdf