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Words, Wordlessness, and the Word: Silence Reconsidered from a Literary Point of View

By Peter Bien

Pendle Hill Pamphlet #303 (1992)

Price: $7.50

Synopsis

A literary scholar considers the paradoxical relationship of silence and words in Quaker worship, drawing on the work of E. M. Forster, Samuel Beckett, and classical Greek writers for insight.

About the Author(s)

Peter Bien first came to Pendle Hill in 1952 to train for Quaker International Voluntary Service in Holland. He served as a Pendle Hill trustee for many years between 1977 and 2005 and also clerked the Publications Committee. He was professor of English and comparative literature at Dartmouth College, specializing in the modern British novel and modern Greek poetry and prose, especially the work of Nikos Kazantzakis. In the 1980s, together with others from Hanover Monthly Meeting, he helped “invent” Kendal at Hanover, where he and his wife Chrysanthi have resided since 2002. In the summers, however, they happily occupy 120 acres in the Adirondacks, somehow entertaining seven grandchildren and their parents. He is the author of four Pendle Hill pamphlets.

Pendle Hill Pamphlet #303

Additional information

Weight 2.3 oz