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Joseph Pearce

Joseph Pearce (born February 12, 1961), is an English-born American writer, and as of 2014 Director of the Center for Faith and Culture[1] at Aquinas College in Nashville, Tennessee, before which he held positions at Thomas More College of Liberal Arts in Merrimack, New Hampshire, Ave Maria College in Ypsilanti, Michigan and Ave Maria University in Ave Maria, Florida.

Joseph Pearce
Pearce in 2007
Born (1961-02-12) February 12, 1961 (age 61)
East London, England
OccupationBiographer
Website
jpearce.co

Formerly aligned with the National Front, a white supremacist group, he converted to Roman Catholicism in 1989, repudiated his earlier views, and now writes from a Catholic perspective and espouses Monarchism and Catholic Social Teaching. He is a co-editor of the St. Austin Review and editor-in-chief of Sapientia Press. He also teaches Shakespearian literature for an online Catholic curriculum provider.

Pearce has written biographies of literary figures, often Christian, including William Shakespeare, J. R. R. Tolkien, Oscar Wilde, C. S. Lewis, G. K. Chesterton, Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and Hilaire Belloc. His books have been translated into at least nine languages.

Biography

Early life

Joseph Pearce was born in Barking, London, and brought up in Haverhill, Suffolk.[P 1] His father, Albert Arthur Pearce, was a heavy drinker with a history of brawling in pubs with Irishmen and non-Whites, had an encyclopedic knowledge of English poetry and British military history, and an intense nostalgia for the vanished British Empire.[2] In 1973 the family moved to Barking in the East End of London, so that the Pearce boys would grow up with Cockney accents. Pearce had been a compliant pupil at the school in Haverhill, but at Eastbury comprehensive school in Barking he led the racist disruption of the lessons taught by a young Pakistani British mathematics teacher.[P 2]

Neo-Nazism

At 15, Pearce joined the youth wing of the National Front, an anti-Semitic and white supremacist political party advocating the compulsory repatriation of all immigrants and British-born non-Whites. He came to prominence in 1977 when he set up Bulldog, the NF's openly racist newspaper.[2] Like his father, Pearce became an enthusiastic supporter of Ulster Loyalism during the Troubles from 1978,[2] and joined the Orange Order, a militantly anti-Catholic secret society closely linked to Ulster Loyalist paramilitary organizations.[2] In 1980, he became editor of Nationalism Today, advocating white supremacy.[3] Pearce was twice prosecuted and imprisoned under the Race Relations Act of 1976 for his writings, in 1981 and 1985.[2][4] At one stage, he contacted John Tyndall to suggest coalition talks with the British National Party, but Tyndall rejected the plan.[5] Pearce was a close associate of Nick Griffin, whom he helped to oust Martin Webster from the NF's leadership.[6] As a spokesman for the Strasserite Political Soldier faction within the NF, Pearce argued for white supremacy, publishing the Fight for Freedom! pamphlet in 1984.[7] At the same time, however, Pearce adopted the group's support for ethnopluralism, contacting the Iranian embassy in London in 1984 in a vain attempt to secure funding from the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran.[8] Pearce became a leading member of a new NF political faction known as the Flag Group, writing for its publications and contributing to its ideology. Pearce notably argued, based on the writings of G.K. Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc, for distributism as an alternative to both Marxism and Laissez faire Capitalism in a 1987 article for the party magazine Vanguard.[9]

Conversion

 
Pearce's conversion to Catholicism was influenced by the writer G. K. Chesterton.[2]

Pearce decided to convert to Catholicism during his second prison term (1985-1986).[10] He was received into the Catholic Church during Mass at Our Lady Mother of God Church in Norwich, England on Saint Joseph's Day, 19 March 1989. Following the Mass, the women of the parish held a surprise party for Pearce, accompanied by a cake with, "Welcome Home, Joe", emblazoned on it.[4][11] Pearce has attributed his conversion to reading books by Catholic authors G. K. Chesterton,[2] John Henry Newman, J.R.R. Tolkien, and Hilaire Belloc.[12]

Ed West, writing about Pearce's conversion in The Catholic Herald in 2010, called his subject "a happy man" and one of the English-speaking world's leading Catholic biographers, hard to square with "the figure familiar to anti-racist campaigners of the Seventies and Eighties: the pugnacious and frightening leader of the Young National Front".[13]

Biographer

Catholic subjects

As a Catholic author, Pearce has focused mainly on the life and work of English Catholic writers, such as J. R. R. Tolkien, G. K. Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc.[14] The Guardian commented that Old Thunder: A Life of Hilaire Belloc "skates over" Belloc's anti-semitism, "the central disfiguring fact of his oeuvre".[15]

He chose the pen name "Robert Williamson" after a character in the Ulster Loyalist ballad The Old Orange Flute, who, like Pearce, is an Orange Order member who converts to Roman Catholicism.[P 3] Pearce's biography of G. K. Chesterton, Wisdom and Innocence: A Life of G. K. Chesterton, was published, under the pseudonym of Robert Williamson, by Hodder and Stoughton in 1996. Jay P. Corrin, reviewing the book for The Catholic Historical Review, called it "a venture of love and high praise", but which adds little to existing biographies. Its contribution, Corrin wrote, is its focus on Chesterton's religious vision and personal relationships, contrasting his friendly style with the combative Belloc.[16]

Pearce's 2000 biography The Unmasking of Oscar Wilde focused on the conflict between Oscar Wilde's homosexuality and his lifelong attraction to the Roman Catholic Church and how it was finally settled by his reception into the Church on his deathbed in Paris.

In a review for The Wildean, Michael Seeney, described Pearce's biography, as "badly written and muddled", "woefully poorly annotated" and using "odd sources without question".[17] Seeney wrote that it "does not 'unmask' anything", but contains too much "cod psychology" and "hyperbolic cliché" to be a "workmanlike biography".[17]

In 2001, Pearce published a biography of Anglo-South African poet and Catholic convert Roy Campbell, followed in 2003 by an edited anthology of Campbell's poetry and verse translations.

Tolkien

Pearce has also written and published a variety of books of Tolkien studies. His essay Letting the Catholic Out of the Baggins discusses why. In 1997, the British people, in a nationwide poll by the Folio Society, voted The Lord of the Rings the greatest book of the 20th-century and the outraged reactions of literary celebrities such as Howard Jacobson, Griff Rhys Jones, and Germaine Greer, inspired Pearce to write the books[18] Tolkien: Man and Myth (1998), Tolkien, a Celebration (1999) and Bilbo's Journey: Discovering the Hidden Meaning in The Hobbit (2012). All of Pearce's Tolkien-themed books consider his subject's person and writings from a Catholic perspective. Bradley J. Birzer writes in The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia that scholars had hardly discussed Tolkien's Catholicism until Pearce's Tolkien: Man and Myth, describing the book as "outstanding", treating The Lord of the Rings as a "theological thriller" that "inspired a whole new wave of Christian evaluations".[19]

Pearce has credited his previously published books of Tolkien studies and, "the wave of Tolkien enthusiasm", caused by Peter Jackson's film adaptation of The Lord of the Rings, with making Pearce into a celebrity intellectual following his 2001 emigration from England to the United States.[20]

New life, new world

Pearce married Susannah Brown, an Irish-American woman with family roots in Dungannon, County Tyrone, in St. Peter's Roman Catholic Church in Steubenville, Ohio in April 2001.[P 4] They have two children. He then received a telephone call and a job offer from the President of Ave Maria College in Michigan. The Pearces arrived in the United States on September 7, 2001. Pearce recalls that his first day of teaching coincided with the September 11 attacks, "making my arrival in the States something of a baptism of fire."[P 4] The first issue of the Catholic literary magazine the St. Austin Review, which Pearce has coedited ever since alongside Robert Asch, was also published in September 2001.[21]

Pearce was the host of the 2009 EWTN television series The Quest for Shakespeare. Based upon his eponymous book, the show is concerned with Pearce's belief that Shakespeare was a Catholic.[22]

In a 2014 essay, Pearce announced that he had become an American citizen.[23]

In his 2017 stage play Death Comes for the War Poets, according to Catholic Arts Today, Pearce weaves "a verse tapestry," about the military and spiritual journeys of war poets Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen.[24]

In a 2022 interview with Pearce, Polish journalist Anna Szyda from the literary magazine Magna Polonia explained that the nihilism of modern American poetry is widely noticed and commented upon in the Third Polish Republic as reflecting, "the deleterious influence of the contemporary civilisation on the American soul." In response, Pearce described "the neo-formalist revival" inspired by the late Richard Wilbur and how it has been reflected in recent verse by the Catholic poets whom he and Robert Asch publish in the St. Austin Review. Pearce said that the Catholic faith and optimism of the younger generation of Catholic poets made him feel hope for the future.[25]

In July 2022, Pearce was a speaker at the 41st Annual Conference of the American Chesterton Society in Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Pearce's lecture was titled "How Chesterton Saved Me from anti-Semitism".[26]

Works

Publications

  • Skrewdriver: The First Ten Years: The Way It's Got to Be!. London: Skrewdriver Services. 1987.
  • Wisdom and Innocence: A Life of G. K. Chesterton. London: Hodder & Stoughton. 1996. ISBN 0-340-67132-7.
  • The Three Ys Men. London: Saint Austin Press. 1998. ISBN 1-901157-02-4.
  • Tolkien: Man and Myth. London: HarperCollins. 1998. ISBN 0-00-274018-4.
  • Literary Converts: Spiritual Inspiration in an Age of Unbelief. London: HarperCollins. 1999. ISBN 0-00-628111-7.
  • Tolkien: A Celebration. Collected Writings on a Literary Legacy. London: Fount. 1999. ISBN 0-00-628120-6.
  • Flowers of Heaven: 1000 years of Christian Verse. London: Hodder & Stoughton. 1999. ISBN 0-340-72220-7.
  • Solzhenitsyn: A Soul in Exile. London: HarperCollins. 1999. ISBN 0-00-274040-0.
  • The Unmasking of Oscar Wilde. London: HarperCollins. 2000. ISBN 0-00-274042-7.
  • Bloomsbury and Beyond: The Friends and Enemies of Roy Campbell. London: HarperCollins. 2001. ISBN 0-00-274092-3. Published in the United States as Unafraid of Virginia Woolf: The Friends and Enemies of Roy Campbell. Wilmington, Delaware: ISI Books. 2004. ISBN 978-1-932236-36-1.
  • Small Is Still Beautiful. London: HarperCollins. 2001. ISBN 0-00-274090-7. Published in the United States as Small Is Still Beautiful: Economics as if Families Mattered. Wilmington, Delaware: ISI Books. 2006. ISBN 978-1-933859-05-7. (Book Review and Summary)
  • Campbell, Roy (2001). Pearce, Joseph (ed.). Selected Poems. London: Saint Austin. ISBN 1-901157-59-8.
  • Old Thunder: A Life of Hilaire Belloc. London: HarperCollins. 2002. ISBN 0-00-274096-6.
  • C. S. Lewis and the Catholic Church. San Francisco: Ignatius Press. 2003. ISBN 0-89870-979-2.
  • Literary Giants, Literary Catholics. San Francisco: Ignatius Press. 2005. ISBN 978-1-58617-077-6.
  • The Quest for Shakespeare: The Bard of Avon and the Church of Rome. San Francisco: Ignatius Press. 2008. ISBN 978-1-58617-224-4.
  • Divining Divinity: A Book of Poems. Kaufmann Publishing. 2008. ISBN 978-0-9768580-1-0.
  • Through Shakespeare's Eyes: Seeing the Catholic Presence in the Plays. San Francisco: Ignatius Press. 2010. ISBN 978-1-58617-413-2.
  • Bilbo's Journey: Discovering the Hidden Meaning in The Hobbit. Charlotte, North Carolina: Saint Benedict Press. 2012. ISBN 978-1-61890-058-6.
  • Shakespeare on Love. San Francisco: Ignatius Press. 2013. ISBN 978-1-58617-684-6.
  • Candles in the Dark: The Authorized Biography of Fr. Ho Lung and the Missionaries of the Poor. Charlotte, North Carolina: Saint Benedict Press. 2013. ISBN 978-1-61890-398-3.
  • Race with the Devil: My Journey from Racial Hatred to Rational Love. Charlotte, North Carolina: Saint Benedict Press. 2013. ISBN 978-1-61890-065-4.
  • Beauteous Truth: Faith, Reason, Literature and Culture. South Bend, Indiana: St. Augustine's Press. 2014. ISBN 978-1-58731-067-6.
  • Frodo's Journey: Discover The Hidden Meaning Of The Lord Of The Rings. Charlotte, North Carolina: Saint Benedict Press. 2015. ISBN 978-1618906755.
  • Poems Every Catholic Should Know. Gastonia, North Carolina: TAN Books. 2016. ISBN 978-1505108620.
  • Merrie England: A Journey Through the Shire. Charlotte, North Carolina: Saint Benedict Press. 2016. ISBN 978-1-50510-719-7.
  • Monaghan: A Life. Charlotte, North Carolina: Saint Benedict Press. 2016. ISBN 978-1-50510-890-3.
  • Further Up & Further In: Understanding Narnia. Gastonia, North Carolina: TAN Books. 2018. ISBN 978-1505108668.
  • Literature: What Every Catholic Should Know. Greenwood Village, Colorado: Augustine Institute. 2019. ISBN 978-1733522120.
  • Benedict XVI: Defender of the Faith. Gastonia, North Carolina: TAN Books. 2022. ISBN 978-1618907363.
  • Faith of Our Fathers: A History of True England. San Francisco, California: Ignatius Press. 2022. ISBN 978-1621644354.

References

Primary

  1. ^ Pearce 2013, pp. 35–37
  2. ^ Pearce 2013, pp. 37–48
  3. ^ Pearce 2013, pp. 208–212
  4. ^ a b Pearce 2013, pp. 226–229

Secondary

  1. ^ . Aquinas College, Nashville. 23 April 2014. Archived from the original on 31 July 2017. Retrieved 13 May 2014.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Gress, Carrie (6 September 2013). "From Skinhead Bulldog to Catholic Man of Letters". Catholic World Report. Retrieved 4 March 2021.
  3. ^ "Two booklets by Joseph 'Joe' Pearce". Roots of Radicalism. Retrieved 4 March 2021.
  4. ^ a b Walker, Clare (23 November 2013). "Radical Conversion From 'Racial Hatred to Rational Love'". National Catholic Register. Retrieved 4 March 2021.
  5. ^ Ray Hill; A. Bell (1988). The Other Face of Terror. London: Grafton. pp. 173–174.
  6. ^ N. Copsey (2004). Contemporary British Fascism: The British National Party and the Quest for Legitimacy. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 34.
  7. ^ M. Durham (1991). "Women and the National Front". In L. Cheles; R. Ferguson; M. Vaughan (eds.). Neo-Fascism in Europe. London: Longman. pp. 265–266.
  8. ^ Ray Hill; A. Bell (1988). The Other Face of Terror. London: Grafton. p. 254.
  9. ^ G. Gable (1991). "The Far Right in the United Kingdom". In L. Cheles; R. Ferguson; M. Vaughan (eds.). Neo-Fascism in Europe. London: Longman. p. 262.
  10. ^ Hall, James (23 August 2017). "How Britain's Nazi punk bands became a gateway drug for US white supremacy". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 22 February 2021.
  11. ^ Pearce (2013), Race with the Devil, pages 203-205.
  12. ^ Pearce (2005), Literary Giants, Literary Catholics, Ignatius Press. Page 14.
  13. ^ West, Ed (5 February 2010). "Rescued from racism by the love of GK". The Catholic Herald. Retrieved 22 February 2021.
  14. ^ Salai, Sean (S.J.) (7 October 2019). "Writer Joseph Pearce on the Case for Shakespeare's Catholicism". America: The Jesuit Review.
  15. ^ Williams, Hywel (17 August 2002). "Beer and Sussex". The Guardian. Retrieved 4 March 2021.
  16. ^ Corrin, Jay P. (1998). "Wisdom and Innocence: A Life of G. K. Chesterton by Joseph Pearce". The Catholic Historical Review. 84 (1): 134–136. doi:10.1353/cat.1998.0149. ISSN 1534-0708. S2CID 159438937.
  17. ^ a b Seeney, Michael (July 2000). "Review: "The Unmasking of Oscar Wilde" by Joseph Pearce". The Wildean (17): 65–67. JSTOR 45270102.
  18. ^ Pearce (2005), Literary Giants, Literary Catholics, Ignatius Press. Pages 296-300.
  19. ^ Birzer, Bradley J. (2013) [2007]. "Christian Readings of Tolkien". In Drout, Michael D. C. (ed.). The J. R. R. Tolkien Encyclopedia. Routledge. pp. 99–101. ISBN 978-0-415-86511-1.
  20. ^ Pearce (2005), Literary Giants, Literary Catholics, Ignatius Press. Pages 15-16.
  21. ^ Pearce (2005), Literary Giants, Literary Catholics, Ignatius Press. Page 16.
  22. ^ . EWTN Television, 6 March 2009 Accessed 5 May 2009.
  23. ^ From Mother England to Uncle Sam: An English American Ponders the Fourth of July, by Joseph Pearce, The Imaginative Conservative, July 3, 2014.
  24. ^ Catholic Arts Today Editors (10 January 2018). "Death Comes for the War Poets" An Interview with Joseph Pearce". Benedict XVI Institute. {{cite web}}: |author= has generic name (help)
  25. ^ Poetry and Modern Culture: An Interview With Joseph Pearce by Anna Szyda. May 17th, 2022.
  26. ^ 41st Annual Chesterton Conference, July 28-30, 2022.

External links

  • Official website
  • Saint Austin Review
  • Clips of Joseph Pearce speaking about his conversion: 1, 2
  • The Quest for Shakespeare, EWTN's page for the TV show
  • Tolkien's Lord Of The Rings — A Catholic Worldview

joseph, pearce, other, people, named, disambiguation, born, february, 1961, english, born, american, writer, 2014, update, director, center, faith, culture, aquinas, college, nashville, tennessee, before, which, held, positions, thomas, more, college, liberal,. For other people named Joseph Pearce see Joseph Pearce disambiguation Joseph Pearce born February 12 1961 is an English born American writer and as of 2014 update Director of the Center for Faith and Culture 1 at Aquinas College in Nashville Tennessee before which he held positions at Thomas More College of Liberal Arts in Merrimack New Hampshire Ave Maria College in Ypsilanti Michigan and Ave Maria University in Ave Maria Florida Joseph PearcePearce in 2007Born 1961 02 12 February 12 1961 age 61 East London EnglandOccupationBiographerWebsitejpearce wbr coFormerly aligned with the National Front a white supremacist group he converted to Roman Catholicism in 1989 repudiated his earlier views and now writes from a Catholic perspective and espouses Monarchism and Catholic Social Teaching He is a co editor of the St Austin Review and editor in chief of Sapientia Press He also teaches Shakespearian literature for an online Catholic curriculum provider Pearce has written biographies of literary figures often Christian including William Shakespeare J R R Tolkien Oscar Wilde C S Lewis G K Chesterton Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn and Hilaire Belloc His books have been translated into at least nine languages Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Neo Nazism 1 3 Conversion 1 4 Biographer 1 4 1 Catholic subjects 1 4 2 Tolkien 1 5 New life new world 2 Works 2 1 Publications 3 References 3 1 Primary 3 2 Secondary 4 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Joseph Pearce was born in Barking London and brought up in Haverhill Suffolk P 1 His father Albert Arthur Pearce was a heavy drinker with a history of brawling in pubs with Irishmen and non Whites had an encyclopedic knowledge of English poetry and British military history and an intense nostalgia for the vanished British Empire 2 In 1973 the family moved to Barking in the East End of London so that the Pearce boys would grow up with Cockney accents Pearce had been a compliant pupil at the school in Haverhill but at Eastbury comprehensive school in Barking he led the racist disruption of the lessons taught by a young Pakistani British mathematics teacher P 2 Neo Nazism Edit At 15 Pearce joined the youth wing of the National Front an anti Semitic and white supremacist political party advocating the compulsory repatriation of all immigrants and British born non Whites He came to prominence in 1977 when he set up Bulldog the NF s openly racist newspaper 2 Like his father Pearce became an enthusiastic supporter of Ulster Loyalism during the Troubles from 1978 2 and joined the Orange Order a militantly anti Catholic secret society closely linked to Ulster Loyalist paramilitary organizations 2 In 1980 he became editor of Nationalism Today advocating white supremacy 3 Pearce was twice prosecuted and imprisoned under the Race Relations Act of 1976 for his writings in 1981 and 1985 2 4 At one stage he contacted John Tyndall to suggest coalition talks with the British National Party but Tyndall rejected the plan 5 Pearce was a close associate of Nick Griffin whom he helped to oust Martin Webster from the NF s leadership 6 As a spokesman for the Strasserite Political Soldier faction within the NF Pearce argued for white supremacy publishing the Fight for Freedom pamphlet in 1984 7 At the same time however Pearce adopted the group s support for ethnopluralism contacting the Iranian embassy in London in 1984 in a vain attempt to secure funding from the Government of the Islamic Republic of Iran 8 Pearce became a leading member of a new NF political faction known as the Flag Group writing for its publications and contributing to its ideology Pearce notably argued based on the writings of G K Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc for distributism as an alternative to both Marxism and Laissez faire Capitalism in a 1987 article for the party magazine Vanguard 9 Conversion Edit Pearce s conversion to Catholicism was influenced by the writer G K Chesterton 2 Pearce decided to convert to Catholicism during his second prison term 1985 1986 10 He was received into the Catholic Church during Mass at Our Lady Mother of God Church in Norwich England on Saint Joseph s Day 19 March 1989 Following the Mass the women of the parish held a surprise party for Pearce accompanied by a cake with Welcome Home Joe emblazoned on it 4 11 Pearce has attributed his conversion to reading books by Catholic authors G K Chesterton 2 John Henry Newman J R R Tolkien and Hilaire Belloc 12 Ed West writing about Pearce s conversion in The Catholic Herald in 2010 called his subject a happy man and one of the English speaking world s leading Catholic biographers hard to square with the figure familiar to anti racist campaigners of the Seventies and Eighties the pugnacious and frightening leader of the Young National Front 13 Biographer Edit Catholic subjects Edit As a Catholic author Pearce has focused mainly on the life and work of English Catholic writers such as J R R Tolkien G K Chesterton and Hilaire Belloc 14 The Guardian commented that Old Thunder A Life of Hilaire Belloc skates over Belloc s anti semitism the central disfiguring fact of his oeuvre 15 He chose the pen name Robert Williamson after a character in the Ulster Loyalist ballad The Old Orange Flute who like Pearce is an Orange Order member who converts to Roman Catholicism P 3 Pearce s biography of G K Chesterton Wisdom and Innocence A Life of G K Chesterton was published under the pseudonym of Robert Williamson by Hodder and Stoughton in 1996 Jay P Corrin reviewing the book for The Catholic Historical Review called it a venture of love and high praise but which adds little to existing biographies Its contribution Corrin wrote is its focus on Chesterton s religious vision and personal relationships contrasting his friendly style with the combative Belloc 16 Pearce s 2000 biography The Unmasking of Oscar Wilde focused on the conflict between Oscar Wilde s homosexuality and his lifelong attraction to the Roman Catholic Church and how it was finally settled by his reception into the Church on his deathbed in Paris In a review for The Wildean Michael Seeney described Pearce s biography as badly written and muddled woefully poorly annotated and using odd sources without question 17 Seeney wrote that it does not unmask anything but contains too much cod psychology and hyperbolic cliche to be a workmanlike biography 17 In 2001 Pearce published a biography of Anglo South African poet and Catholic convert Roy Campbell followed in 2003 by an edited anthology of Campbell s poetry and verse translations Tolkien Edit Pearce has also written and published a variety of books of Tolkien studies His essay Letting the Catholic Out of the Baggins discusses why In 1997 the British people in a nationwide poll by the Folio Society voted The Lord of the Rings the greatest book of the 20th century and the outraged reactions of literary celebrities such as Howard Jacobson Griff Rhys Jones and Germaine Greer inspired Pearce to write the books 18 Tolkien Man and Myth 1998 Tolkien a Celebration 1999 and Bilbo s Journey Discovering the Hidden Meaning in The Hobbit 2012 All of Pearce s Tolkien themed books consider his subject s person and writings from a Catholic perspective Bradley J Birzer writes in The J R R Tolkien Encyclopedia that scholars had hardly discussed Tolkien s Catholicism until Pearce s Tolkien Man and Myth describing the book as outstanding treating The Lord of the Rings as a theological thriller that inspired a whole new wave of Christian evaluations 19 Pearce has credited his previously published books of Tolkien studies and the wave of Tolkien enthusiasm caused by Peter Jackson s film adaptation of The Lord of the Rings with making Pearce into a celebrity intellectual following his 2001 emigration from England to the United States 20 New life new world Edit Pearce married Susannah Brown an Irish American woman with family roots in Dungannon County Tyrone in St Peter s Roman Catholic Church in Steubenville Ohio in April 2001 P 4 They have two children He then received a telephone call and a job offer from the President of Ave Maria College in Michigan The Pearces arrived in the United States on September 7 2001 Pearce recalls that his first day of teaching coincided with the September 11 attacks making my arrival in the States something of a baptism of fire P 4 The first issue of the Catholic literary magazine the St Austin Review which Pearce has coedited ever since alongside Robert Asch was also published in September 2001 21 Pearce was the host of the 2009 EWTN television series The Quest for Shakespeare Based upon his eponymous book the show is concerned with Pearce s belief that Shakespeare was a Catholic 22 In a 2014 essay Pearce announced that he had become an American citizen 23 In his 2017 stage play Death Comes for the War Poets according to Catholic Arts Today Pearce weaves a verse tapestry about the military and spiritual journeys of war poets Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen 24 In a 2022 interview with Pearce Polish journalist Anna Szyda from the literary magazine Magna Polonia explained that the nihilism of modern American poetry is widely noticed and commented upon in the Third Polish Republic as reflecting the deleterious influence of the contemporary civilisation on the American soul In response Pearce described the neo formalist revival inspired by the late Richard Wilbur and how it has been reflected in recent verse by the Catholic poets whom he and Robert Asch publish in the St Austin Review Pearce said that the Catholic faith and optimism of the younger generation of Catholic poets made him feel hope for the future 25 In July 2022 Pearce was a speaker at the 41st Annual Conference of the American Chesterton Society in Milwaukee Wisconsin Pearce s lecture was titled How Chesterton Saved Me from anti Semitism 26 Works EditPublications Edit Skrewdriver The First Ten Years The Way It s Got to Be London Skrewdriver Services 1987 Wisdom and Innocence A Life of G K Chesterton London Hodder amp Stoughton 1996 ISBN 0 340 67132 7 The Three Ys Men London Saint Austin Press 1998 ISBN 1 901157 02 4 Tolkien Man and Myth London HarperCollins 1998 ISBN 0 00 274018 4 Literary Converts Spiritual Inspiration in an Age of Unbelief London HarperCollins 1999 ISBN 0 00 628111 7 Tolkien A Celebration Collected Writings on a Literary Legacy London Fount 1999 ISBN 0 00 628120 6 Flowers of Heaven 1000 years of Christian Verse London Hodder amp Stoughton 1999 ISBN 0 340 72220 7 Solzhenitsyn A Soul in Exile London HarperCollins 1999 ISBN 0 00 274040 0 The Unmasking of Oscar Wilde London HarperCollins 2000 ISBN 0 00 274042 7 Bloomsbury and Beyond The Friends and Enemies of Roy Campbell London HarperCollins 2001 ISBN 0 00 274092 3 Published in the United States as Unafraid of Virginia Woolf The Friends and Enemies of Roy Campbell Wilmington Delaware ISI Books 2004 ISBN 978 1 932236 36 1 Small Is Still Beautiful London HarperCollins 2001 ISBN 0 00 274090 7 Published in the United States as Small Is Still Beautiful Economics as if Families Mattered Wilmington Delaware ISI Books 2006 ISBN 978 1 933859 05 7 Book Review and Summary Campbell Roy 2001 Pearce Joseph ed Selected Poems London Saint Austin ISBN 1 901157 59 8 Old Thunder A Life of Hilaire Belloc London HarperCollins 2002 ISBN 0 00 274096 6 C S Lewis and the Catholic Church San Francisco Ignatius Press 2003 ISBN 0 89870 979 2 Literary Giants Literary Catholics San Francisco Ignatius Press 2005 ISBN 978 1 58617 077 6 The Quest for Shakespeare The Bard of Avon and the Church of Rome San Francisco Ignatius Press 2008 ISBN 978 1 58617 224 4 Divining Divinity A Book of Poems Kaufmann Publishing 2008 ISBN 978 0 9768580 1 0 Through Shakespeare s Eyes Seeing the Catholic Presence in the Plays San Francisco Ignatius Press 2010 ISBN 978 1 58617 413 2 Bilbo s Journey Discovering the Hidden Meaning in The Hobbit Charlotte North Carolina Saint Benedict Press 2012 ISBN 978 1 61890 058 6 Shakespeare on Love San Francisco Ignatius Press 2013 ISBN 978 1 58617 684 6 Candles in the Dark The Authorized Biography of Fr Ho Lung and the Missionaries of the Poor Charlotte North Carolina Saint Benedict Press 2013 ISBN 978 1 61890 398 3 Race with the Devil My Journey from Racial Hatred to Rational Love Charlotte North Carolina Saint Benedict Press 2013 ISBN 978 1 61890 065 4 Beauteous Truth Faith Reason Literature and Culture South Bend Indiana St Augustine s Press 2014 ISBN 978 1 58731 067 6 Frodo s Journey Discover The Hidden Meaning Of The Lord Of The Rings Charlotte North Carolina Saint Benedict Press 2015 ISBN 978 1618906755 Poems Every Catholic Should Know Gastonia North Carolina TAN Books 2016 ISBN 978 1505108620 Merrie England A Journey Through the Shire Charlotte North Carolina Saint Benedict Press 2016 ISBN 978 1 50510 719 7 Monaghan A Life Charlotte North Carolina Saint Benedict Press 2016 ISBN 978 1 50510 890 3 Further Up amp Further In Understanding Narnia Gastonia North Carolina TAN Books 2018 ISBN 978 1505108668 Literature What Every Catholic Should Know Greenwood Village Colorado Augustine Institute 2019 ISBN 978 1733522120 Benedict XVI Defender of the Faith Gastonia North Carolina TAN Books 2022 ISBN 978 1618907363 Faith of Our Fathers A History of True England San Francisco California Ignatius Press 2022 ISBN 978 1621644354 References EditPrimary Edit Pearce 2013 pp 35 37 Pearce 2013 pp 37 48 Pearce 2013 pp 208 212 a b Pearce 2013 pp 226 229 Secondary Edit Joseph Pearce Joins Aquinas College Aquinas College Nashville 23 April 2014 Archived from the original on 31 July 2017 Retrieved 13 May 2014 a b c d e f g Gress Carrie 6 September 2013 From Skinhead Bulldog to Catholic Man of Letters Catholic World Report Retrieved 4 March 2021 Two booklets by Joseph Joe Pearce Roots of Radicalism Retrieved 4 March 2021 a b Walker Clare 23 November 2013 Radical Conversion From Racial Hatred to Rational Love National Catholic Register Retrieved 4 March 2021 Ray Hill A Bell 1988 The Other Face of Terror London Grafton pp 173 174 N Copsey 2004 Contemporary British Fascism The British National Party and the Quest for Legitimacy Basingstoke Palgrave Macmillan p 34 M Durham 1991 Women and the National Front In L Cheles R Ferguson M Vaughan eds Neo Fascism in Europe London Longman pp 265 266 Ray Hill A Bell 1988 The Other Face of Terror London Grafton p 254 G Gable 1991 The Far Right in the United Kingdom In L Cheles R Ferguson M Vaughan eds Neo Fascism in Europe London Longman p 262 Hall James 23 August 2017 How Britain s Nazi punk bands became a gateway drug for US white supremacy The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 22 February 2021 Pearce 2013 Race with the Devil pages 203 205 Pearce 2005 Literary Giants Literary Catholics Ignatius Press Page 14 West Ed 5 February 2010 Rescued from racism by the love of GK The Catholic Herald Retrieved 22 February 2021 Salai Sean S J 7 October 2019 Writer Joseph Pearce on the Case for Shakespeare s Catholicism America The Jesuit Review Williams Hywel 17 August 2002 Beer and Sussex The Guardian Retrieved 4 March 2021 Corrin Jay P 1998 Wisdom and Innocence A Life of G K Chesterton by Joseph Pearce The Catholic Historical Review 84 1 134 136 doi 10 1353 cat 1998 0149 ISSN 1534 0708 S2CID 159438937 a b Seeney Michael July 2000 Review The Unmasking of Oscar Wilde by Joseph Pearce The Wildean 17 65 67 JSTOR 45270102 Pearce 2005 Literary Giants Literary Catholics Ignatius Press Pages 296 300 Birzer Bradley J 2013 2007 Christian Readings of Tolkien In Drout Michael D C ed The J R R Tolkien Encyclopedia Routledge pp 99 101 ISBN 978 0 415 86511 1 Pearce 2005 Literary Giants Literary Catholics Ignatius Press Pages 15 16 Pearce 2005 Literary Giants Literary Catholics Ignatius Press Page 16 The Quest for Shakespeare EWTN Television 6 March 2009 Accessed 5 May 2009 From Mother England to Uncle Sam An English American Ponders the Fourth of July by Joseph Pearce The Imaginative Conservative July 3 2014 Catholic Arts Today Editors 10 January 2018 Death Comes for the War Poets An Interview with Joseph Pearce Benedict XVI Institute a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a author has generic name help Poetry and Modern Culture An Interview With Joseph Pearce by Anna Szyda May 17th 2022 41st Annual Chesterton Conference July 28 30 2022 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Joseph Pearce Official website Autobiographical page Saint Austin Review Clips of Joseph Pearce speaking about his conversion 1 2 Joseph Pearce speaks about his conversion The Quest for Shakespeare EWTN s page for the TV show Tolkien s Lord Of The Rings A Catholic Worldview Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Joseph Pearce amp oldid 1112167515, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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