Alison Grant Milbank (néeLegg; born 10 October 1954) is a British Anglican priest and literary scholar specialising in religion and culture. She is Canon Theologian at Southwell Minster and Professor of Theology and Literature at the University of Nottingham in its Department of Theology and Religious Studies.[2]
Milbank's research and teaching focuses on the relation of religion to culture in the post-Enlightenment period, with particular literary interest in non-realist literary and artistic expression, such as the Gothic, the fantastic, horror and fantasy. She has published a book on the Catholic poetics of J. R. R. Tolkien and G. K. Chesterton. She is currently[clarification needed] working on a book which will trace the theological history of the emergence of the Gothic from the pre-Reformation period to the present day.
Chesterton and Tolkien as theologians: the fantasy of the real, T & T Clark, 2007, ISBN978-0-567-04094-7
Ann Ward Radcliffe (1995). Alison Milbank (ed.). The castles of Athlin and Dunbayne. Oxford University Press. ISBN978-0-19-282357-1.
Ann Ward Radcliffe (2008). Alison Milbank (ed.). A Sicilian Romance. Oxford University Press. ISBN978-0-19-953739-6.
Milbank, Alison (1992). Daughters of the House: modes of the gothic in Victorian fiction. Basingstoke: Macmillan. ISBN978-0333566152.
Alison Milbank, ed. (2007). Beating the traffic: Josephine Butler and Anglican social action on prostitution today. Winchester: George Mann. ISBN978-0955241543.
Milbank, Alison; Davison, Andrew (2010). For the Parish: a critique of fresh expressions. London: SCM Press. ISBN978-0334043652.
References
^Milbank, Alison (1988). Daughters of the House: Modes of the Gothic in the Fiction of Wilkie Collins, Charles Dickens and Sheridan le Fanu (PhD thesis). Lancaster, England: University of Lancaster. OCLC499196121.
^"Alison Milbank". Department of Theology and Religious Studies. The University of Nottingham. Retrieved 23 June 2024.