Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Author's Note
- Introduction
- 1 The Victorians and the Bible
- 2 Nineteenth-Century Lives of Jesus
- 3 The Rise of the Fictional Jesus
- 4 The Fifth Gospel of Oscar Wilde
- 5 The Afterlife of Oscar Wilde's Oral Tales
- 6 A Peculiar Protestant: The Gospels According to George Moore
- 7 George Moore's Life of Jesus
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - Nineteenth-Century Lives of Jesus
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Author's Note
- Introduction
- 1 The Victorians and the Bible
- 2 Nineteenth-Century Lives of Jesus
- 3 The Rise of the Fictional Jesus
- 4 The Fifth Gospel of Oscar Wilde
- 5 The Afterlife of Oscar Wilde's Oral Tales
- 6 A Peculiar Protestant: The Gospels According to George Moore
- 7 George Moore's Life of Jesus
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
[I]f all the Bibles and Testaments were destroyed tomorrow, they could almost be reconstructed from the literature that has grown up around the life of Christ.
Samuel Ayres, Jesus Christ Our LordFrom the late 1830s to the end of the nineteenth century, scholarly preoccupation with the historicity of the Gospels generated a form of biblical literature generically classified as ‘Lives of Jesus’. In The Quest of the Historical Jesus (1906), the first comprehensive survey of over a century of critical enquiry into the life and teachings of Christ, Albert Schweitzer states that ‘Not all the Lives of Jesus could be cited. It would take a whole book simply to list them’, a claim not to be dismissed as mere hyperbole. More recent studies in the field estimate that 60,000 or so such works were published in Europe and the USA in the mid-to-late nineteenth century. Reaching the peak of its popularity in the early 1870s, the genre was undeniably jaded by the century's end, the varieties of different angles on the Gospel narratives being all but exhausted. The American author Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, anxious to signal the novelty of her own late contribution to the Lives tradition, The Story of Jesus Christ (1897), provides a succinct account of the forerunners she is attempting to leave behind:
This book is not theology or criticism, nor is it biography. It is neither history, controversy, nor a sermon […] It is not a study of Jewish life or Oriental customs. […]
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- Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2010