Description: Crafts a literary ethics attentive to the paradoxes of critique and re-vision, universality and particularity, and reads in suffering a redemptive or redeemable reality
Review Quotes: This is an informed study and an excellent intervention into literary ethics. But it also may be that Cynthia Wallace has uncovered a more careful and ethical practice of writing and reading, and of religion too. If this is so, then this insightful volume will deserve a readership as broad, important, and interdisciplinary as its implications.--Matthew Potts "The ALH Online Review "