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Article # : 16153 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 6 / 1989  1,864 Words
Author : Richard Quebedeaux
Richard Quebedeaux is a senior consultant for the International Religious Foundation in New York. He is the author of The New Charismatics II (1983), By What Authority: The Rise of Personality Cults in American Christianity (1982), I Found It! The Story of Bill Bright and Campus Crusade (1979), and The Worldly Evangelicals (1978).

       THE SLEEP OF REASON
       Fantasy and Reality from the Victorian Age to the First World War
       Derek Jarrett
       New York: Harper & Row, 1989
       249 pp., $22.50
       
        Derek Jarrett has taught history at the University of London for many years. His latest book, The Sleep of Reason, concerns the profound change of attitudes about man and woman and God and the universe in the English-speaking world (focusing on Britain) between the 1840s and the 1920s, from the accession of Victoria to the publications of T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land. With great cogency and frequent humor Jarrett tells about a journey from certainty to loss of faith in a world where belief, both in progress and in God, had been crushed; and he convincingly recreates the Victorian, then Edwardian, cosmos of doubt, skepticism, superstition, and deep sense of loss.
       
        The author begins by reminding us that in less than a century the scientific revolution had demonstrated--for the first time in history--that the invisible (or "spiritual") was no longer the necessary framework within which truths about the visible world could be discerned. The prescribed fantasies of religion were replaced by secret fantasies revealed on the psychoanalyst's couch or more respectable ones engendered by popular fiction. On the one hand, ever-increasing numbers of people refused to believe in God during this era; on the other hand, however, almost as many refused to believe that Sherlock Holmes was fictitious.
       
        By the 1830s, says Jarrett, a ... (1998 of 11914 Characters)
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