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Informationen zum Autor Leonard Moss has written books on Arthur Miller, Joseph Conrad, literature and evolution, and tragedy and philosophy. He edited the journal of the Rhode Island Jewish Historical Association in Providence from 1998 to 2004. Klappentext Although their vocabularies differ, biologists, biblical authors, and playwrights describe the paradox that Charles Darwin outlines in The Origin of Species (1859) when he observed the coexistence of a drive for permanence and a contrasting capacity to modify, deviate from, or transform established identities. The Torah; Books of Ecclesiastes, Job, and Matthew; and plays by Shakespeare, O'Neill, and Beckett embody a convergence of constancy and change. Their principle literary mechanisms-their challenge-response narrative design, rhetorical repetitions, and metaphorical associations-translate a biological contradiction into a moral dilemma that leads to recurring Darwinian outcomes. An evolutionary process becomes the template for the progressions and problems of belief systems transmitted by masterpieces of Western literature. Surprisingly, most biblical writing celebrates an outcome entirely consonant with the narratives of evolution.This study deals primarily with characters and their communities in biblical and tragic texts who toil mightily, usually with limited success, to integrate the certainty of inherited dogma with the originality of useful change. Through this study, the author concludes that Darwin's insight can expand an understanding of literature, and literary analysis will support Darwin's insight. Zusammenfassung Evolutionary theory has provoked intense controversy. Darwin and Literature reconciles adversarial viewpoints by demonstrating the relevance of Darwin's key concepts in The Origin of Species to writings of the Bible! Shakespeare! and other literary works. This book examines how authors transform biological paradoxes into cultural issues. Inhaltsverzeichnis ContentsAcknowledgmentsIntroductionPart I: Biblical Adaptation and Dysfunction1. The Darwinian Narrative2. The Hebrew Origin of Species3. Departures from Orthodoxy4. The Adaptation According to MatthewPart II: Tragic Transformation5. Shakespeare's Suspended Heroes6. The O'Neill Variation7. Beckett: Constancy, Flux, and InnovationConclusionNotesA Bibliographical Guide to Recent Evolutionary TheoryIndexAbout the Author...