- Website
- http://colematson.com
- Cole Matson is an upcoming PhD student in the Institute for Theology, Imagination & the Arts at St Andrews, focusing on Theology & Theatre. His proposed topic is the creation of a Eucharistic theatre, using liturgy as a model for building communion between the artist and the audience.
- Transpositions is a collaborative effort of students associated with the Institute for Theology, Imagination, and the Arts at the University of St Andrews.
Featured Posts
-

-
Mything the Point: Why Some Stories Strike True and Others Fall Short [Part One]
05 December 2011 8:00 AM | 7 Comments -
![Dorothy L. Sayers on the Contemplative Vocation of the Artist One of my favourite pieces of writing by Dorothy L. Sayers is her 1946 letter exchange with C.S. Lewis.[1] Lewis wrote to Sayers inviting her to contribute a volume to a planned series on Anglican theology for youth, to which...](http://www.transpositions.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/dorothy-l-sayers-36x36.jpg)
-
Receive new posts by email:
Recent Comments
- Cole Matson on We Can Do Better: A Reply to John Starke
- Jim Watkins on We Can Do Better: A Reply to John Starke
- Andrew Finden on We Can Do Better: A Reply to John Starke
- Art and Kitsch « New City Arts Initiative • Charlottesville, Virginia on Wearing Out the Faith
- Leticia Cortina Aracil on Art, Incarnation and the Human Body
- Dave Reinhardt on An Exercise in Transposition: Reflections on ‘The Artist’
- Dave Reinhardt on An Exercise in Transposition: Reflections on ‘The Artist’
- Sara Schumacher on An Exercise in Transposition: Reflections on ‘The Artist’
- Maureen on An Exercise in Transposition: Reflections on ‘The Artist’
- Dave Reinhardt on An Exercise in Transposition: Reflections on ‘The Artist’


![C.S. Lewis’s Guidelines for a Christian Journal In April 1947, C.S. Lewis wrote to Laurence Whistler with advice on the creation of a Christian literary journal which Whistler was hoping to start.[1] Here are some of Lewis’s guidelines: ‘I think the Periodical ought to come before the...](http://www.transpositions.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/cs-lewis-pipe-115x115.jpg)
![Dorothy L. Sayers on the Contemplative Vocation of the Artist One of my favourite pieces of writing by Dorothy L. Sayers is her 1946 letter exchange with C.S. Lewis.[1] Lewis wrote to Sayers inviting her to contribute a volume to a planned series on Anglican theology for youth, to which...](http://www.transpositions.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/dorothy-l-sayers-115x115.jpg)
![‘He Who Loses His Life will Find It’: How Narrative Gives Life [Part Two] In my previous post, I discussed the arguments of directors Deborah Pearson and George Hunka against narrative. Specifically, Pearson argued that narratives are problematic because they erase those experiences and people which do not fit the narrative’s version of events...](http://www.transpositions.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/loseshislife-115x115.jpg)
![‘Drinking the Kool-Aid’: Does Narrative Kill? [Part One] In her article ‘The Necessity of Narrative?’, director Deborah Pearson critiques narrative, viewing it as a storytelling tool which is morally suspect because it necessarily erases those people and experiences which do not fit into a particular version of events....](http://www.transpositions.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2011/09/koolaid1-115x115.gif)

