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Craig was born and raised in [[Woodstock|Woodstock, New Brunswick]], New Brunswick. He attended the [[University of King's College]] (Halifax) joining its Foundation Year Program in the late 1970s., earning a Bachelor of Arts. During this time he served as sacristan in the [[King's College Chapel, Halifax|King's Chapel]]. He later received a Master of Arts from Dalhousie University and completed a PhD in theology and religious studies at the [[University of Wales]]. During this period he became a member of the Anglican Church of Canada. |
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Craig was born and raised in [[Woodstock|Woodstock, New Brunswick]], New Brunswick. He attended the [[University of King's College]] (Halifax) joining its Foundation Year Program in the late 1970s., earning a [[Bachelor of Arts]]. During this time he served as sacristan in the [[King's College Chapel, Halifax|King's Chapel]]. He later received a Master of Arts from Dalhousie University and completed a PhD in theology and religious studies at the [[University of Wales]]. During this period he became a member of the Anglican Church of Canada. |
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Barry Craig is the author or co-author of several books on theology, philosophy, and literature. His solo-authored work ''Apostle to the Wilderness: Bishop John Medley and the Evolution of the Anglican Church'' (2005) examines the history of the Anglican Church in Canada. He co-wrote four additional volumes with his wife, Sara MacDonald, including ''Recovering Hegel from the Critique of Leo Strauss: The Virtues of Modernity'' (2014), ''Recollecting Dante’s Divine Comedy in the Novels of Mark Helprin: The Love that Moves the Sun and the Other Stars'' (2015), ''Fate and Freedom in the Novels of David Adams Richards'' (2017), and ''The Coen Brothers and the Comedy of Democracy'' (2018). These works are published by academic presses (University of Toronto Press and Lexington Books/Rowman & Littlefield) and are cited in scholarly literature. |
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Barry Craig is the author or co-author of several books on theology, philosophy, and literature. His solo-authored work ''Apostle to the Wilderness: Bishop John Medley and the Evolution of the Anglican Church'' (2005) examines the history of the Anglican Church in Canada. He co-wrote four additional volumes with his wife, Sara MacDonald, including ''Recovering Hegel from the Critique of Leo Strauss: The Virtues of Modernity'' (2014), ''Recollecting Dante’s Divine Comedy in the Novels of Mark Helprin: The Love that Moves the Sun and the Other Stars'' (2015), ''Fate and Freedom in the Novels of David Adams Richards'' (2017), and ''The Coen Brothers and the Comedy of Democracy'' (2018). These works are published by academic presses ([[University of Toronto]] Press and Lexington Books/Rowman & Littlefield) and are cited in scholarly literature. |