F. R. Leavis was the chief editor of "Scrutiny," which between
1932 and 1953 had some claim on being the most influential literary
journal in the English-speaking world.
The Common Pursuit is a selection of Leavis's essays from
"Scrutiny," including his robust defence of Milton against T. S.
Eliot, his deeply-felt engagement with Shakespeare, and his severe
strictures on attempts to import sociology and political activism
into the study of literature.
The title of the book comes from a passage in Eliot's 'The
Function of Criticism', in which the poet argues that the critic
must engage in 'the common pursuit of true judgment'. For Leavis,
this meant a strenuous insistence on discriminatory criticism -
clear statements about what is good and morally mature and
admirable, and equally clear condemnation of what is trivial. The
Common Pursuit, with its controversial judgments of Bunyan and
Auden, Swift and Forster, remains as challenging now as it did in
1952, and it is easy to see why Leavis - who was never offered a
professorship by Cambridge University - held such sway over the
study of English literature in his time.
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