Wildness
Henry David Thoreau and the Making of an American Theology
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Notre Dame Press
Publishing:1st Mar '26
£28.99
This title is due to be published on 1st March, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

In and through his experience of nature, Henry David Thoreau imagined and developed a distinctly American theology of the wild.
In Wildness: Henry David Thoreau and the Making of an American Theology, Lydia Willsky-Ciollo articulates how Thoreau was enmeshed in a decades-spanning project of crafting a theology of wildness. During Thoreau's post-college years and his time at Walden Pond, he evolved from hopeful writer to observant theologian, whose primary work as a surveyor enabled his theological vocation.
Willsky-Ciollo skillfully guides readers through Thoreau's writings and life as his theology emerges and evolves. The focus of Thoreau's theology - wildness itself - centers on the divinity extant in every person and in every molecule of creation. Definitively American in its ethos, Thoreau's theology reflects a distinctly American set of tensions: progress and tradition, wilderness and civilization, the destructive and the generative nature of work, the individual and the society, the local and the universal, and the Christian and the pluralist. While remaining critical of dogmatism and institutional rigidity, he formed his theological vision in conversation with the Christianity of his own time and place.
Ultimately, theology is an active process, and interpreting the wild experience of divine revelation is the purview of all. Thoreau left the door open to his readers, who he hoped would pick up the pen where he left off and write their own theologies of wildness.
"Through a novel and convincing reading of Thoreau's unpublished last work, Wild Fruits, Lydia Willsky-Ciollo displays how various influences culminate in Thoreau's injunction to cultivate one's inner wildness, that is, one's divinity." - Philip F. Gura, author of American Transcendentalism
"In this rich, comprehensive, even lyrical introduction to Thoreau and Transcendentalism, Lydia Willsky-Ciollo seeks to renew both Thoreau and divinity for a secular world. Her bold new argument gives us a Thoreau who still matters deeply, whose "theology of the wild" is deliberate, coherent, well-founded in the history of religious thought, and profoundly meaningful today - an environmental faith not meant to be confined to a bookshelf, but to live and grow in our shared world of natural beauty and spiritual meaning." - Laura Dassow Walls, author of Henry David Thoreau
ISBN: 9780268210748
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
368 pages