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Showing 1 - 6 of 6 matches in All Departments
The Triumph of Vulgarity in a thinker's guide to rock 'n' roll.
Rock music mirrors the tradition of nineteenth-century Romaniticsm,
Robert Patison says. Whitman's "barbaric yawp" can still be heard
in the punk rock of the Ramones, and the spirit that inspired Poe's
Eureka lives on in the lyrics of Talking Heads. Rock is vulgar,
Pattison notes, and vulgarity is something that high culture has
long despised but rarely bothered to define. This book is the first
effort since John Ruskin and Aldous Huxley to describe in depth
what vulgarity is, and how, with the help of ideas inherent in
Romaniticism, it has slipped the constraints imposed on it by
refined culture and established its own loud arts.
"Alas," Newman said of liberalism, "it is an error overspreading, as a snare, the whole earth." The Great Dissent examines how from his implacable opposition to liberalism Newman developed a sweeping critique of modern values only rivaled in breadth and scorn by that of Nietzsche. The Great Dissent offers a revaluation of Newman's whole thought and establishes his place in the history of ideas as the leading English dissident from the liberalism of contemporary civilization and the foremost modern spokesman for the reality of dogmatic truth.
Additional Editors Are J. E. Burke, B. Chalmers, R. L. Sproull, And A. V. Tobolsky.
Additional Editors Are J. E. Burke, B. Chalmers, R. L. Sproull, And A. V. Tobolsky.
Graveyards or wonderlands have more often than firesides and nurseries been the element in which we encounter the child in English literature, and Robert Pattison begins his narrative by asking why literary children are seldom associated with parents and family, but instead repeatedly occur as solitary figures against a background of social and philosophic melancholy. In a skillful fusion of theology, social history, and literature, Pattison isolates and analyzes the repeated conjunction of the literary figure of the child with two fundamental ideas of Western culture--the fall of man and the concept of Original Sin. His study of child figures used in English literature and their antecedents in classical literature and early Christian writing documents the symbiotic development of an idea and an image. Pattison encounters a wide range of literary offspring, among whom are Marvell's little girls, Gray's young Etonians, Blake's children of innocence and experience, the youthful narrators of Dickens and Gosse, the children of George Eliot and Henry James, and the young protagonists in the children's literature of James Janeway, Christina Rossetti, and Lewis Carroll.
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