Aeolian harmonics: Murray Cox and Geoffrey Rowell

Geoffrey Rowell enjoyed a long friendship with the psychiatrist Murray Cox, and this essay looks briefly at some of the areas in which their concerns converged. Murray Cox used the phrase "the Aeolian mode" to describe forms of listening and interpreting in therapy which allowed buried con...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Williams, Rowan 1950- (Author)
Format: Electronic Article
Language:English
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Published: Routledge [2018]
In: International journal for the study of the Christian church
Year: 2018, Volume: 18, Issue: 2/3, Pages: 114-123
RelBib Classification:FA Theology
KAJ Church history 1914-; recent history
KDE Anglican Church
ZD Psychology
Further subjects:B Oxford Movement
B Catholic Revival
B John Keble
B "Mystery"
B J.H. Newman
B Trialogue Conference
B psychotherapeutic listening
B E.B.Pusey
B Aeolian Mode
B Broadmoor
Online Access: Volltext (Resolving-System)
Description
Summary:Geoffrey Rowell enjoyed a long friendship with the psychiatrist Murray Cox, and this essay looks briefly at some of the areas in which their concerns converged. Murray Cox used the phrase "the Aeolian mode" to describe forms of listening and interpreting in therapy which allowed buried connections to come into focus, and he explicitly linked this to some of the ways in which theology worked. Geoffrey Rowell embodied in particular ways the phenomenon of the "Catholic Revival", in the nineteenth-century Church of England, with its sense of the force of mysteries, as in Pusey, and the need expressed, as in Newman and Keble, to approach them with "reserve". Attempts are made in the essay to trace some of the echoes and convergences.
ISSN:1747-0234
Contains:Enthalten in: International journal for the study of the Christian church
Persistent identifiers:DOI: 10.1080/1474225X.2018.1516968