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A history and critique of the last 200 years of cultural criticism, form Addison and Steele to Barthes and Derrida, by Britain’s most stylish critic. This wide-ranging book argues that criticism emerged in early bourgeois society as a central feature of a “public sphere” in which political, ethical, and literary judgements could mingle under the benign rule of reason. The disintegration of this fragile culture brought on a crisis in criticism, whose history since the 18th century has been fraught with ambivalence and anxiety. Terry Eagleton is Professor of Cultural Theory and John Rylands Fellow, University of Manchester. His other publications include Marxism and Literary Criticism (1976), Walter Benjamin (1981), The Ideology of the Aesthetic (1990), Ideology (1991), The Crisis of Contemporary Culture (1993), Heathcliff and the Great Hunger (1995), and The Illusions of Postmodernism (1997).
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Publication Novermber 2005 Series 136 pages Paper |