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dc.contributor.authorMoffat, Kirstineen_NZ
dc.contributor.editorWhiteford, Peteren_NZ
dc.contributor.editorMiles, Geoffreyen_NZ
dc.date.accessioned2018-02-19T22:20:44Z
dc.date.available2017en_NZ
dc.date.available2018-02-19T22:20:44Z
dc.date.issued2017en_NZ
dc.identifier.citationMoffat, K. (2017). That ‘austere anti-aesthetic angel’: James K. Baxter and Puritanism. In P. Whiteford & G. Miles (Eds.), Quarrels with Himself: Essays on James K. Baxter as Prose Writer (pp. 185–211). Wellington: Victoria University Press.en
dc.identifier.isbn9781776561711en_NZ
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10289/11668
dc.description.abstractIt is necessary to begin with an apology to James K. Baxter. In my previous musings on the Puritan legacy in New Zealand I have chastised Baxter, along with other writers and critics of his generation, for using Puritanism as a reductive catchphrase to summarise all that they most despise about New Zealand society (Moffat, 'Destruction'). The phrase that I have repeatedly used to epitomise Baxter's perceived antagonism is his description of Pu,itanism as an 'austere anti-aesthetic angel' (Complete Prose 2. 328). Returning to this phrase as I meditate at much greater length on Baxter's relationship with Puritanism, I realise that I am guilty of flattening and simplifying what is a much more complex engagement with Puritanism in his prose writing. Baxter's phrase contains both condemnation and implied praise. He was vehemently opposed to what he regarded as the Puritan suspicion of imagination and sexuality, and throughout his writing castigated all the social and religious forces that sought to curb and quell aestheticism and the natural, instinctual self. Yet, he also refers to Puritanism as 'austere', a quality that much of his writing and his own life choices suggest he regarded as admirable, particularly as it relates to a paring back and relinquishing of the unnecessary paraphernalia of capitalism and materialism. And what to make of 'angel'? Surely this is more than simply alliterative effect. It too undercuts the antagonism of 'anti-aesthetic' to suggest that in Baxter's eyes there is at least a trace of the divine about Puritanism and its legacy.
dc.format.extent12en_NZ
dc.format.mimetypeapplication/pdf
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherVictoria University Pressen_NZ
dc.rightsCopyright © the editors and the author.
dc.titleThat 'austere anti-aesthetic angel': James K. Baxter and Puritanismen_NZ
dc.typeChapter in Book
dc.relation.isPartOfQuarrels with Himself: Essays on James K. Baxter as Prose Writeren_NZ
pubs.begin-page185
pubs.elements-id212778
pubs.end-page211
pubs.place-of-publicationWellingtonen_NZ
pubs.publication-statusPublisheden_NZ
uow.identifier.chapter-no8


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