![]() "healthy connection between man and the things of the earth." (4) Don Murray, who has written extensivelyĪbout Kinsella and several of his works, concludes that theĪuthor's baseball stories and his Indian stories represent a ![]() Symbols and mythologies-those of Native Americans-is implicit in theĪrguments of a few scholars. That Kinsella positively associates baseball with another set of "symbols, ironies, Biblical and mythological tales retold" toĮncourage readers to look for deeper meaning. Which is "a metaphor that contains a complex of feelings, symbols,Īnd themes." (2) Kinsella himself acknowledged that he employs It "looks at baseball but rather through baseball," Novel is permeated with religion and spirituality, and that its authorĮmploys baseball as a metaphor for religion. Kinsella's Shoeless Joe (1982) agree that the APA style: Circles in the corn: native American spirituality in Kinsella's shoeless Joe.Circles in the corn: native American spirituality in Kinsella's shoeless Joe." Retrieved from ![]() 2006 Sports Literature Association 19 May. ![]() MLA style: "Circles in the corn: native American spirituality in Kinsella's shoeless Joe." The Free Library. ![]()
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