20th & 21st Century Literature

The secularization of culture happened as soon as Adam was thrown from the Garden for eating forbidden fruit. He had sinned, and cut off from direct union with God human civilization became a largely irreligious affair—Christians have been trying ever since to increase their influence in the arts, politics, academics and the popular sphere.

To hear a lot of modern apologists, however, you'd think the shift away from historical Christianity to worldly attitudes was recent. Some look back as far as the Enlightenment, some as little as thirty or forty years ago, showing how political and moral trends evidence the departure. For them, the real bad guys are Charles Darwin, Friedrich Nietzsche, Jean-Paul Sartre, sometimes even Soren Kierkegaard (one of the really great Christian writers of the last 200 years).

While those outside the Christian tradition could perhaps be forgiven such shortsightedness (intent on tracing Modern Progress as they are), for Christians to share these views is unforgivable. Western civilization can be traced to ancient Greece, and before that to Egypt, two of the most pagan and corrupt cultures of all time. The ideas popular now have their roots in the philosophies of Plato, Aristotle, Zeno, Democritus and Thales.

Every modern philosophy has a Classical era corollary, if not its direct match at least the primitive form of the current idea. Anaximander suggested men evolved from animals 2500 years before Charlie Darwin was born; Heraclitus posited rudimentary postmodern philosophy two millennia before the advent of modernism; Diogenes was a nihilist before the nation of Russia existed, and about 300 years before Christ.

The best way to understand 20th century literature is not as a brand-new canon promoting recent anti-Christian thought, but as a body of work manifesting the newest iterations of secular philosophy and Christian responses. Great writers of the past, from Shelley and Robert Louis Stevenson to Rabelais and George Eliot, were fully as secular (even atheistic) as any Hemingway, Camus or Douglas Adams of the last 100 years.

Just as secular—and in many instances, just as brilliant. While there's more bad writing available than ever before as a result of the democratization of publishing, for every Stephanie Meyer there's at least one Faulkner or Annie Dillard. The novel came into its own in the 20th century as writers understood its limitations. Good writers have something universal to say about humanity, avoiding merely regional or too-specific interests.

Not all of it is "fun" reading—some of the best writers like Kafka, Thomas Mann and Solzhenitsyn can be hard to get through, though they can also write riveting passages of elegant prose. Others are a joy to read, like Steinbeck, G.K. Chesterton and George Bernard Shaw, combining a talent for poetic narrative and humor reminiscent of Dickens and Twain.

Like the ideas it embraces, the purpose of 20th century literature remains the same as the literature of any other era: to examine life, to celebrate it, to understand it better, and to connect readers with each other and with new ideas. Of course you'll want to be aware when you're reading secular authors and examine their work closely, but the same is true of Benjamin Franklin's Autobiography or Virgil's Aeneid.

Most of all, enjoy these books. The best of them explore deep and important ideas, but the best of them are also great artistic achievements, not mere dissertations but independent organisms alive and dangerous and beautiful. For all the technology and machines of our modern age, good literature is still organic, and the ability to enjoy it comes from an unmapped region of the soul where every Kerouac, Cather and Marquez had to go for their masterpieces.

Review by C. Hollis Crossman
C. Hollis Crossman used to be a child. Now he's a husband and father who loves church, good food, and weird stuff. He might be a mythical creature, but he's definitely not a centaur. Read more of his reviews here.
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36 Items found Print
Active Filters: Drama (Plays)
Bernard Shaw's Plays
by George Bernard Shaw, edited by Warren S. Smith
from W. W. Norton and Co.
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$4.50 (1 in stock)
Copenhagen
by Michael Frayn
from Anchor Books
in 20th & 21st Century Literature (Location: LIT7-20)
Crucible, The
by Arthur Miller
from Dramatists Play Service
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Cyrano de Bergerac
by Edmond Rostand
from Heritage Press
Drama for 9th-Adult
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Death of a Salesman
by Arthur Miller
from Penguin Putnam
American Tragedy for 10th-Adult
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$14.00
Death of a Salesman
Viking Critical Library
by Arthur Miller, edited by Gerald Weales
from Viking Press
American Tragedy for 10th-Adult
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Diary of Anne Frank
by Francis Goodrich & Albert Hackett, with a foreword by Brooks Atkinson
from Random House
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Endgame and Act Without Words
by Samuel Beckett
Reprint from Grove Press, Inc.
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Glass Menagerie
by Tennessee Williams
5th edition from New Directions
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Glass Menagerie
by Tennessee Williams
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Harvey
by Mary Chase
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Man and Superman
by George Bernard Shaw
from Heritage Press
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Man Born to be King
by Dorothy L. Sayers
from Classical Academic Press
Drama for 10th-Adult
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$23.95
Man for All Seasons
by Robert Bolt
1st Vintage Intl Ed April 1990 from Vintage Classics
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$15.00
Miracle Worker
by William Gibson
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Miracle Worker
by William Gibson
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Murder in the Cathedral
by T.S. Eliot
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No Exit: A Play in One Act
by Jean-Paul Sartre; translated by Paul Bowles
from Samuel French
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Our Town
by Thornton Wilder
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Our Town
by Thornton Wilder
from Scholastic Inc.
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Our Town
by Thornton Wilder
from HarperCollins
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$14.99
Pygmalion
Dover Thrift Editions
by George Bernard Shaw
from Dover Publications
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Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Are Dead
by Tom Stoppard
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Samuel Beckett
by Samuel Beckett
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Shadowlands
by William B. Nicholson
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Story of Kullervo
by J.R.R. Tolkien
1st edition from Houghton Mifflin
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Story of Kullervo
by J.R.R. Tolkien
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Streetcar Named Desire
by Tennessee Williams
New edition from New Directions
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The Crucible
by Arthur Miller
from Penguin Classics
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The Stranger
by Albert Camus, translated by Daniel Ortega
from Unknown Publisher
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$3.00 (12 in stock)
The Tower
by Owen Barfield, Edited by Leslie A. Taylor and Jefferey H. Taylor
from Parlor Press
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$36.99
Three Great Plays
by Eugene O'Neill
from Dover Publications
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Twelve Angry Men
by Reginald Rose
from Penguin Classics
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Two Plays for Puritans
by George Bernard Shaw
from Heritage Press
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Waiting for Godot
by Samuel Beckett
from Grove Publishing
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Zeal of Thy House
by Dorothy Sayers
from Wipf and Stock Publishers
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