Tag Archives: Suicide

No Comfort Here: Muriel Spark, Catholicism, and the Problem of Control versus Self Control

Muriel Spark’s fiction rejects the idea that conversion offers comfort. Instead, it imposes structure, constraint, and limits on human authorship. Through The Driver’s Seat and The Public Image, and in contrast to postmodernism and writers like du Maurier, Spark shows that attempts at total control collapse into termination. Set against lived experience of suicide and ideation, the essay argues that meaning requires shared reality and sustained participation, not imposed closure.

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Despair and Doctrine: Suicide Across Religious Traditions

A comparative theological examination of suicide in Catholicism, Eastern Orthodoxy, Islam, Hinduism, Buddhism, and Judaism, exploring how each tradition interprets suicide through doctrines of will, suffering, afterlife, and divine justice, offering context to Dante’s unyielding vision in Inferno.

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