John Milton and the English Revolution: A Study in the Sociology of Literature |
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Page 14
... reality to the totality of reality grasped theoretically . Weber , however , subscribed to an essentially tragic , neo - Kantian epistemology which conceived of reality as fundamentally unknowable . The goal of abstraction then becomes ...
... reality to the totality of reality grasped theoretically . Weber , however , subscribed to an essentially tragic , neo - Kantian epistemology which conceived of reality as fundamentally unknowable . The goal of abstraction then becomes ...
Page 28
... reality . ' The true great realists , ' argues Lukács , ... knew that this distortion of reality . . . , this division of the complete human personality into a public and a private sector was a mutilation of the essence of man . Hence ...
... reality . ' The true great realists , ' argues Lukács , ... knew that this distortion of reality . . . , this division of the complete human personality into a public and a private sector was a mutilation of the essence of man . Hence ...
Page 40
... reality . Perhaps the most precise statement of what Leavis meant by ' life ' is to be found when , citing Blake ... reality , but rather an active agent influencing reality such that ' the major novelists . . . count in the same ...
... reality . Perhaps the most precise statement of what Leavis meant by ' life ' is to be found when , citing Blake ... reality , but rather an active agent influencing reality such that ' the major novelists . . . count in the same ...
Contents
The World Vision of Revolutionary Independency | 50 |
The English Revolutionary Crisis | 60 |
Reason Triumphant | 94 |
Copyright | |
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absolutist aesthetic analysis argues bourgeois bourgeoisie capitalism capitalist central characterised Christ classical clearly Comus conception concrete course crisis culture defeat determined earlier economic Eliot emphasised Engels English Civil War English Revolution epic essentially example F. R. Leavis fact feudal Georg Lukács Goldmann Harmondsworth Hill Hill's human Ibid ideal ideology Independents individual intellectual J. H. Hexter Leavis Leavis's Levellers literary criticism London Lukács Lukács's Marx Marx's Marxist merely Milton mode of production moral nature nonetheless notion novel Paradise Lost Paradise Regained Parliament particular philosophical poem poem's poetic political precisely Presbyterians problem Prose Puritan quietism radical rational rationalist rationalist world vision realism reality reason and passion remains Restoration revolutionary Samson Agonistes Satan sense Seventeenth Century significance social class socialist realism society sociology of literature specific structure suggests T. S. Eliot temptation theory totality tradition tragedy Woodhouse world vision writings