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Converts: From Oscar Wilde to Muriel Spark, Why So Many Became Catholic in the 20th Century
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About This Book
Why did Catholicism attract so many unlikely converts in Britain during the twentieth century? The twentieth century is understood as an era of growing, inexorable secularism, yet in Britain between the 1890s and the 1960s there was a marked turn to Rome. In the first half of the century, Catholicism became an intellectual and spiritual fashion attracting more than half a million converts, including fascinating artists, writers, and thinkers. What drew these men and women to join the church, and what difference did conversion make to them? Melanie McDonagh examines the lives of these notable converts from the perspective of their faith. For the Decadent circle of Aubrey Beardsley and Oscar Wilde—who converted on his deathbed—artists such as Gwen John and David Jones, the philosopher Elizabeth Anscombe, and novelists including G. K. Chesterton, Graham Greene, Evelyn Waugh, and Muriel Spark, Catholicism offered stability in increasingly febrile times. McDonagh explores their lives and influences, the reaction to their conversions, and the priests who initiated them into their faith.
Reviews
"McDonagh restores to view a cast of characters— sunny, tormented, cerebral, eccentric — whose diverse routes into the Church illuminate a profoundly complex spiritual landscape."
"McDonagh focuses less on the conversions themselves, given their largely non-verbal nature, than on their influence on the life and work of the converts."
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