The Scotsman

Festival of religion and literature to be held in run-up to Christmas

- By BRIAN FERGUSON bferguson@scotsman.com

Edinburgh University is to stage Scotland's first religous literary festival in the run-up to Christmas.

James Robertson, Val Mcdermid, Robert Harris, Frances Spufford, Catherine Fox and Rachel Mann are among the authors lined up to take part in the Winter Tales Book Festival.

More than 25 events are planned to take place before in-person audiences from 3-5 December.

Billed as “a festival of literature, religion and the imaginatio­n ,” it has been instigated to coincide with the 175th anniversar­y of New College, the home of the school of divinity at the university, on The Mound.

The festival line-up also includes the broadcaste­r Sally Magnusson, the actor and comedian Miles Jupp, poet Christine De Luca, former Bishop of Edinburgh Richard Holloway and the Kenyan scottish storytelle­r and performer Mara Menzies.

Programme highlights include an exploratio­n of William Shakespear­e’s play The Winter’s Tale, a celebratio­n of the late Orcadian writer George Mackay Brown 100 years after his birth, an event bringing stories and music from Scottish-jewish history to life, a look at links Christmas carols have with coded political messages, church disapprova­l and pagan intrusions.

Special events will look at the “hostile environmen­t” for refugees and whether the literary world and writers can do anything to make them more welcome, the depiction of the sea, science and religion in literature.

Broadcaste­r Cathy will interview scholar and commentaor Mona Siddiqui, professor of Islamic and interrelig­ious studies at Edinburgh University about her career, the inspiratio­n behind her writing, and how her beliefs have shaped her work.

Francesca Barbini and Michelle Sloan will be taking part in two children’s events.

The festival will also feature a service of readings, carols and music at which the Rt Hon Lord Wallace of Tankerness QC, Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland, will preach.

An announceme­nt about the festival states: “In celebratio­n of 175 years of ground-breaking research into religion, spirituali­ty and the arts, New College is delighted to host its first ever literary festival.

"Join us to hear an array of top speakers and writers from the UK and beyond as we explore the relationsh­ip between belief and fiction, religion and pluralism, the complex web of religion, politics, and the environmen­t, fantasy and spirituali­ty, and much more.

“Discover the deep-rooted connection­s between faith and historical fiction, and the darker side of religion and crime fiction.

"Understand why some prominent thinkers have rejected belief completely. And find out why Edinburgh as a place has held such special fascinatio­n in literature."

Alison Jack, assistant principal of New College, said: “The world of religion, belief and spirituali­ty has not only provided authors with some of their most memorable plots but the literature also confronts some of the ethical, cultural and historical questions shaping our world.”

 ?? ?? ↑ Val Mcdermid will be taking part in the new Winter Tales Book Festival in Edinburgh next month
↑ Val Mcdermid will be taking part in the new Winter Tales Book Festival in Edinburgh next month

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