Ideology An Introduction Eagleton Pdf

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This collection of readings on the concept of ideology is brought together by the Marxist critic, Terry Eagleton. His introduction traces the historical evolution of ideology and examines in a more theoretical style the various meanings of the word and their significance.

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Preview — Ideology by Terry Eagleton

‘His thought is redneck, yours is doctrinal and mine is deliciously supple.’
Ideology has never been so much in evidence as a fact and so little understood as a concept as it is today. From the left it can often be seen as the exclusive property of ruling classes, and from the right as an arid and totalizing exception to their own common sense. For some, the concept now see
..more
Published April 17th 1991 by Verso (first published May 16th 1988)
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This review is a scab.
Terry Eagleton’s study of the history of ideology is the perfect primer for one setting out on an attempt at understanding this concept, which tends toward equivocal definitions, amorphous implications and contrasting origin theories. One of the successes of this book is how it encourages the reader/thinker to embrace a kind of precariousness, slipperiness and mutability when considering what ideology is, how it takes hold and works through society. It quickly becomes appar
..more
Oct 13, 2013Simon marked it as read-enough-of
Eagleton is a maddeningly sloppy writer/thinker. He obviously knows a lot about this stuff but the breeziness with which he sweeps over important issues, the frequent use of highly tendentious examples, all of it clothed in a language of apparent care and precision, is dispiriting.
One example: his first chapter is on what ideology is. He is obviously drawing on a tradition of philosophical conceptual analysis here, and the intent is good. He starts by noting that the word 'ideology' is used to
..more
Why do people who are most in need of government services vote to cut them? The answer to this mind-numbing question is partly untangled by this fluent and easy-to-read introduction as Terry Eagleton traces the history of the study of ideas, from the Enlightenment, when it was discovered that human psychology is dominated by this phenomenon, to the postmodern era. Clearly, Eagleton believes, as perhaps one cannot help doing, that Marx has contributed the most to this science and so the most leng..more
Feb 15, 2014Grigory rated it really liked it
Shelves: marxism, intellectual-history, xix-century, xx-century, xviii-century
Great book, just one note: it requires enormous attention and concentration.
Jun 10, 2011sologdin rated it liked it
not a bad introduction to the subject matter. witty, committed, fine attention to detail. opens with a decent schedule of attempted definitions. contains useful discussion of ideological 'strategies,' and describes the effects of ideology in general. attempts generally to present a history, from the earliest uses up through the 20th century.
Some people disapprove but I rather like Eagleton's humour in choosing examples (e.g. the third on the right trireme galley slave) that illustrate his points (e.g. about false consciousness). They make this book a useful critique everyday life. Those who are deadly serious (in every sense of the term) might want to look elsewhere.
İ met him at library via his book ' ideology '.ideology has a large meaning and he mentioned every points .After that ,l will read all his studies.
Nov 16, 2017Emma rated it really liked it
Shelves: philosophy, non-fiction, politics, criticism
Oct 16, 2016Burak rated it it was amazing
Shelves: philosophy, ideology, annotations, reference-read
If you want to write a single word, or think a single thought about ideology, this is your perfect literature review. It isn't a treatment that is likely to clarify the murky air around the concept of ideology for the reader (or let me take a step back from generalizing and say that it did not do this for me), for the concept does not allow for that to happen very easily.
Instead, the book succesfully gives a nearly full account of the written thought on and around the subject. For most of the b
..more
Eagleton summarizes and critiques a wide range of philosophers who are generally associated with the study of ideology, often contrasting one theory against the other. His Marxist background seeps through in every line but that didn't stop the book from becoming food for thought, and that's what a book is supposed to be. The wide array of theories discussed reinforced my own conviction that human subjectivity is an artifact, dynamically constructed by the interaction between social forces and ma..more
Though this was, for someone like me with no formal education on the subject, a great overview of different thinkers on the subject of ideology from Hegel to Bourdieu, by this year it feels both a little outdated, and a little short on a clear articulation of Eagleton's own views.
Often he will say 'well this writer came up with an interesting idea but takes it too far', choosing to occupy a vaguely delineated middle ground between the extremes of discourse analysis or historicist theory, but de
..more
Great, really worth a read. I know of no book quite like it and if there's ever a concept that should be resurrected for our times it's 'ideology'.
Some very obvious shortcomings - he neglects post-colonial and feminist critiques in favour of the canon, but mercilessly shreds the canon if that's any consolation.
Only took me so long to read because I had to have a good think after every 10 pages.
The cranky old marxist shtick is sometimes hilarious , sometimes grating, so probs not for everybody
..more
Nov 25, 2011Eric Hines rated it really liked it
Shelves: theory, marxism, political, epistemology
A tour of Western ideas of ideology . . . both as purpose-giving mental framework and ideology as false consciousness. Wise enough to see that these two facets can be distinguishable--some beliefs are just false--but that, ultimately, we're all shaped and motivated by beliefs that are essentially ideological--unprovable but nonetheless essential.
Very good introduction to the complex concept of ideology, but definitely a very pointed one. Eagleton is occasionally scathing in his criticism of how certain theorist understand and deploy the concept.
Very useful book to trace the meaning of the word IDEOLOGY..just that no matter how much..'objective' Eagleton tries to seem it is soooo obvious that Marxism is all over his book and I doubt he would not side with Marxist theories..not necessarily Marx's but Marxists'.
A great primer and way to branch off into primary source material with a skeletal understanding of what you're getting into.
Feb 04, 2008Fernando rated it it was amazing · review of another edition
Christopher Flynn rated it really liked it
Mar 14, 2008
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Widely regarded as Britain's most influential living literary critic & theorist, Dr Eagleton currently serves as Distinguished Prof. of English Literature at the Univ. of Lancaster & as Visiting Prof. at the Nat'l Univ. of Ireland, Galway. He was Thomas Warton Prof. of English Literature at the Univ. of Oxford ('92-01) & John Edward Taylor Prof. of English Literature at the Univ. of Ma..more
“A socialist is just someone who is unable to get over his or her astonishment that most people who have lived and died have spent lives of wretched, fruitless, unremitting toil.” — 111 likes
“I argue that three key doctrines of postmodernist
thought have conspired to discredit the classical concept of ideology. The first of these doctrines turns on a rejection of the notion of representation--in fact, a rejection of an empiricist model of representation, in which the representational baby has been nonchalantly slung out with, the empiricist
bathwater. The second revolves on an epistemological skepticism which would hold that the very act of identifying a form of consciousness as ideological entails some untenable notion of absolute truth. Since the latter idea attracts few devotees these days, the former is thought to crumble in its wake. We cannot brand Pol Pot a Stalinist bigot since this would imply some metaphysical certitude about what not being a Stalinist bigot would involve. The third doctrine concerns a reformulation of the relations between rationality, interests and power, along roughly neo-Nietzschean lines, which is thought to render the whole concept of ideology redundant.”
— 0 likes
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Ideology An Introduction Eagleton Pdf File


Eagleton holding one of his books after a talk at the Mechanics' Institute, Manchester, in 2008
Born
22 February 1943 (age 76)[1]
Salford, England[1]
Alma mater
Literary Theory: An Introduction (1983)
The Ideology of the Aesthetic (1990)
The Illusions of Postmodernism (1996)
EraContemporary philosophy
RegionWestern philosophy
SchoolContinental philosophy
Institutions
Academic advisorsRaymond Williams
Good/Bad utopianism[2]
    • Karl Marx[3]
    • F. R. Leavis[3]
    • Raymond Williams[4]
    • Louis Althusser[3]
    • Herbert McCabe[3]

Terence Francis EagletonFBA[1] (born 1943) is a British literary theorist, critic, and public intellectual.[5][6][7][8] He is currently Distinguished Professor of English Literature at Lancaster University.

Eagleton has published over forty books, but remains best known for Literary Theory: An Introduction (1983), which has sold over 750,000 copies.[9] The work elucidated the emerging literary theory of the period, as well as arguing that all literary theory is necessarily political. He has also been a prominent critic of postmodernism, publishing works such as The Illusions of Postmodernism (1996) and After Theory (2003). He argues that, influenced by postmodernism, cultural theory has wrongly devalued objectivity and ethics. His thinking is influenced by Marxism and by Christian faith.

Formerly the Thomas Warton Professor of English Literature at the University of Oxford (1992–2001) and John Edward Taylor Professor of Cultural Theory at the University of Manchester (2001–2008), Eagleton has held visiting appointments at universities around the world including Cornell, Duke, Iowa, Melbourne, Trinity College in Dublin, and Yale.[10]

Eagleton delivered Yale University's 2008 Terry Lectures and the University of Edinburgh's 2010 Gifford Lecture entitled The God Debate.[11] He gave the 2010 Richard Price Memorial Lecture at Newington Green Unitarian Church, speaking on 'The New Atheism and the War on Terror'.[12] In 2009, he published a book which accompanied his lectures on religion, entitled Reason, Faith, and Revolution: Reflections on the God Debate.

  • 3Career
    • 3.2Dawkins, Hitchens and the New Atheism

Early life[edit]

Eagleton was born on 22 February 1943[1] to Francis Paul Eagleton and his wife, Rosaleen (née Riley).[13] He grew up in a working-class Irish Catholic family in Salford, with roots in County Galway. His mother's side of the family had strong Irish republican sympathies. He served as an altar boy at a local Carmelite convent where he was responsible for escorting novice nuns taking their vows, a role referred to in the title of his memoir The Gatekeeper.[14]

Ideology An Introduction Eagleton Pdf Example

Education and academia[edit]

He was educated at De La Salle College, a Roman Catholic grammar school in Pendleton, Salford.[3] In 1961 he went to read English at Trinity College, Cambridge, whence he graduated with first-class honours.[4] He later described his undergraduate experience as a 'waste of time'.[3] In 1964, he moved to Jesus College, Cambridge, where as a junior research fellow and doctoral student, he became the youngest fellow at the college since the 18th century.[10] He was supervised by Raymond Williams.[4] It was during this period that his leftist convictions began to take hold, and he edited a radical Catholic leftist periodical called Slant.[4]

In 1969 he moved to the University of Oxford where he became a fellow and tutor of Wadham College (1969–1989), Linacre College (1989–1993) and St Catherine's College, becoming Thomas Warton Professor of English in 1992. At Wadham, Eagleton ran a well-known seminar on Marxist literary theory which, in the 1980s, metamorphosed into the radical pressure group Oxford English Limited and its journal News from Nowhere: Journal of the Oxford English Faculty Opposition, to which he contributed several pieces. In 2001 Eagleton left Oxford to occupy the John Edward Taylor chair of Cultural Theory at the University of Manchester.

Career[edit]

He began his literary studies with the 19th and 20th centuries, then conformed to the stringent academic Marxism of the 1970s. He then published an attack on his mentor Williams's relation to the Marxist tradition in the pages of the New Left Review, in the mode of the French critic Louis Althusser. In the 1960s, he became involved with the left-wing Catholic group Slant, authoring a number of theological articles (including A Marxist Interpretation of Benediction), as well as a book Towards a New Left Theology. A major turning point was his Criticism & Ideology (1976) in which Eagleton discusses various theorists and critics from F. R. Leavis and (his tutor) Raymond Williams to Pierre Macherey. This earliest response to Theory is critical and substantive with Eagleton supplying a dense web of categories for 'a materialist criticism' which situates the author as well as the text in the general mode of production, the literary mode of production and particular ideologies. In chapter 4 he gives a thorough overview of one theme in the English context – 'organicist concepts of society' or 'community' – as worked by petty-bourgeois Victorian writers, from George Eliot to D. H.Lawrence, and how this determines textual form in each instance.

Literary Theory and After Theory[edit]

In Literary Theory: An Introduction (1983, revised 1996), Eagleton surveys the history of theoretical approaches to literature, from its beginnings with Matthew Arnold, through formalism, psychoanalysis, and structuralism, to post-structuralism. In the process, he demonstrates what is the thesis of the book: that theory is necessarily political. Theory is always presented as if it is unstained by point of view and is neutral, but in fact it is impossible to avoid having a political perspective. Peter Barry has said of the book that it 'greatly contributed to the 'consolidation' of literary theory and helped to establish it firmly on the undergraduate curriculum'.[15] Eagleton's approach to literary criticism is one firmly rooted in the Marxist tradition, though he has also incorporated techniques and ideas from more recent modes of thought as structuralism, Lacanian analysis and deconstruction. As his memoir The Gatekeeper recounts, Eagleton's Marxism has never been solely an academic pursuit. He was active in the International Socialists (along with Christopher Hitchens) and then the Workers' Socialist League whilst in Oxford. He has been a regular contributor to the London Review of Books.[16]

After Theory (2003) was written two decades later, after the end of the great period of High Theory – the cultural theory of Foucault, the postmodernists, Derrida, et al. Looking back, Eagleton evaluates its achievements and failures, and proposes new directions needing to be pursued. He considers that among the great achievements of Theory were the expansion of objects of study (to include gender, sexuality, popular culture, post-colonialism, etc.), and the wide-ranging self-reflective criticism of traditional assumptions. But in Eagleton's estimation there were also many serious mistakes, for instance: the assault on the normative and the insistence on the relativity of truth leaves us powerless to criticize oppression; the rejection of objectivity and (excessively) of all forms of essentialism bespeak an unrecognized idealism, or at least a blindness to our human materiality, ultimately born of an unconscious fear of death; and cultural studies has wrongly avoided consideration of ethics, which for Eagleton is inextricably tied to a proper politics. It is virtue and politics and how they may be realized, among other things, that Eagleton offers as new avenues needing to be explored by cultural studies. And that is the link to his previous work, Literary Theory, which proposed that all theory is ultimately political. After Theory fleshes out this political aspect, tied to ethics, growing out of the fact that humans exist in neediness and dependency on others, their freedom bounded by the common fact of death.

Ideology an introduction eagleton pdf example

Dawkins, Hitchens and the New Atheism[edit]

Eagleton has become a vocal critic of what has been called the New Atheism. In October 2006, he published a review of Richard Dawkins's The God Delusion in the London Review of Books. Eagleton begins by questioning Dawkins's methodology and understanding: 'Imagine someone holding forth on biology whose only knowledge of the subject is the Book of British Birds, and you have a rough idea of what it feels like to read Richard Dawkins on theology'. Eagleton further writes, 'Nor does [Dawkins] understand that because God is transcendent of us (which is another way of saying that he did not have to bring us about), he is free of any neurotic need for us and wants simply to be allowed to love us.'[17] He concludes by suggesting Dawkins has not been attacking organised faith so much as a sort of rhetorical straw man: 'Apart from the occasional perfunctory gesture to 'sophisticated' religious believers, Dawkins tends to see religion and fundamentalist religion as one and the same. This is not only grotesquely false; it is also a device to outflank any more reflective kind of faith by implying that it belongs to the coterie and not to the mass. The huge numbers of believers who hold something like the theology I outlined above can thus be conveniently lumped with rednecks who murder abortionists and malign homosexuals.'[18]

Terry and Gifford Lectures[edit]

In April 2008 Eagleton delivered Yale University's Terry Lectures, with the title Faith and Fundamentalism: Is belief in Richard Dawkins necessary for salvation?, constituting a continuation of the critique he had begun in The London Review of Books. Introducing his first lecture with an admission of ignorance of both theology and science, Eagleton goes on to affirm: 'All I can claim in this respect, alas, is that I think I may know just about enough theology to be able to spot when someone like Richard Dawkins or Christopher Hitchens – a couplet I shall henceforth reduce for convenience to the solitary signifier Ditchkins – is talking out of the back of his neck.'[19][20] An expanded version of these lectures was published in 2009 as Reason, Faith, and Revolution: Reflections on the God Debate.[21]

Football[edit]

Eagleton sees football as a new opium of the people distracting ordinary people from more serious, important social concerns. Eagleton is pessimistic as to whether this distraction can be ended:

For the most part football these days is the opium of the people, not to speak of their crack cocaine. Its icon is the impeccably Tory, slavishly conformist Beckham. The Reds are no longer the Bolsheviks. Nobody serious about political change can shirk the fact that the game has to be abolished. And any political outfit that tried it on would have about as much chance of power as the chief executive of BP has in taking over from Oprah Winfrey.[22]

Criticism of Martin and Kingsley Amis[edit]

Eagleton in 2012

In late 2007, a critique of Martin Amis included in the introduction to a 2007 edition of Eagleton's book Ideology was widely reprinted in the British press. In it, Eagleton took issue with Amis' widely quoted writings on 'Islamism', directing particular attention to one specific passage from an interview with Ginny Dougary published in the Times on 9 September 2006.

What can we do to raise the price of them doing this? There's a definite urge – don't you have it? – to say, 'The Muslim community will have to suffer until it gets its house in order.' What sort of suffering? Not letting them travel. Deportation – further down the road. Curtailing of freedoms. Strip-searching people who look like they're from the Middle East or from Pakistan .. Discriminatory stuff, until it hurts the whole community and they start getting tough with their children .. It's a huge dereliction on their part.[23]

Eagleton criticised Amis and expressed surprise as to its source, stating: '[these are] not the ramblings of a British National Party thug .. but the reflections of Martin Amis, leading luminary of the English metropolitan literary world.' He drew a connection between Amis and his father (the novelist Kingsley Amis). Eagleton went on to write that Martin Amis had learned more from his father – whom Eagleton described as a reactionary 'racist, anti-Semitic boor, a drink-sodden, self-hating reviler of women, gays and liberals' – than merely 'how to turn a shapely phrase.' Eagleton added there was 'something rather stomach-churning at the sight of those such as Amis and his political allies, champions of a civilisation that for centuries has wreaked untold carnage throughout the world, shrieking for illegal measures when they find themselves for the first time on the sticky end of the same treatment.'[24]

The essay became a cause célèbre in British literary circles. Yasmin Alibhai-Brown, a commentator for The Independent, wrote an article[25] about the affair, to which Amis responded via open letter, calling Eagleton 'an ideological relict .. unable to get out of bed in the morning without the dual guidance of God and Karl Marx.'[26] Amis said the views Eagleton attributed to him as his considered opinion was in fact his spoken description of a tempting urge, in relation to the need to 'raise the price' of terrorist actions. Eagleton's personal comments on Kingsley Amis prompted a further response from Kingsley's widow, the novelist Elizabeth Jane Howard. Howard wrote to the Daily Telegraph, noting that for a supposed 'anti-semitic homophobe', it was peculiar that the only guests at the Howard-Amis nuptials were either Jewish or gay.[27] As Howard explained, 'Kingsley was never a racist, nor an anti-Semitic boor. Our four great friends who witnessed our wedding were three Jews and one homosexual.' In a later interview, Howard added: 'I have never even heard of this man Eagleton. But he seems to be a rather lethal combination of a Roman Catholic and a Marxist .. He strikes me as like a spitting cobra: if you get within his range he'll unleash some poison.'[28] Colin Howard, Howard's homosexual brother, called Eagleton 'a little squirt', adding that Sir Kingsley, far from being homophobic, had extended an affectionate friendship to him and helped him come to terms with his sexuality.[27]

Eagleton defended his comments about Martin and Kingsley Amis in The Guardian, claiming the main bone of contention – the substance of Amis' remarks and views – had been lost amid the media furore.[24]

Critical reactions[edit]

William Deresiewicz wrote of After Theory, Eagleton's book, as follows.. :

[I]s it that hard to explain what Eagleton's up to? The prolificness, the self-plagiarism, the snappy, highly consumable prose and, of course, the sales figures: Eagleton wishes for capitalism's demise, but as long as it's here, he plans to do as well as he can out of it. Someone who owns three homes shouldn't be preaching self-sacrifice, and someone whose careerism at Oxbridge was legendary shouldn't be telling interviewers of his longstanding regret at having turned down a job at the Open University.[29]

The novelist and critic David Lodge, writing in the May 2004 New York Review of Books on Theory and After Theory, concluded:

Some of Theory's achievements are genuine and permanent additions to knowledge, or intellectual self-knowledge. Eagleton is quite right to assert that we can never go back to a state of pre-Theory innocence about the transparency of language or the ideological neutrality of interpretation .. But like all fashions it was bound to have a limited life of novelty and vitality, and we are now living through its decadence without any clear indication of what will supersede it. Theory has, in short, become boringly predictable to many people who were once enthusiastic about it, and that After Theory is most interesting when its focus is furthest from its nominal subject is perhaps evidence that Terry Eagleton is now bored by it too.[30]

Family[edit]

Eagleton was married to the American academic Willa Murphy, with whom he has three children. They have since divorced. Eagleton has two other sons by his first marriage, which ended in 1976 after ten years.[5]

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Publications[edit]

  • The New Left Church [as Terence Eagleton] (1966)
  • Shakespeare and Society: Critical Studies in Shakespearean Drama (1967)
  • Exiles and Émigrés: Studies in Modern Literature (1970)
  • The Body as Language: Outline of a New Left Theology (1970)
  • Myths of Power: A Marxist Study of the Brontës (1975)
  • Criticism & Ideology (1976)
  • Marxism and Literary Criticism (1976)
  • Walter Benjamin, or Towards a Revolutionary Criticism (1981)
  • The Rape of Clarissa: Writing, Sexuality, and Class Struggle in Samuel Richardson (1982)
  • Literary Theory: An Introduction (1983)
  • The Function of Criticism (1984)
  • Saints and Scholars (1987; a novel)
  • Raymond Williams: Critical Perspectives (1989; editor)
  • Saint Oscar (1989; a play about Oscar Wilde)
  • The Significance of Theory (1989)
  • The Ideology of the Aesthetic (1990)
  • Nationalism, Colonialism, and Literature (1990)
  • Ideology: An Introduction (1991/2007)
  • Wittgenstein: The Terry Eagleton Script, The Derek Jarman Film (1993)
  • Literary Theory (1996)
  • The Illusions of Postmodernism (1996)
  • Heathcliff and the Great Hunger (1996)
  • Marx (1997)
  • Crazy John and the Bishop and Other Essays on Irish Culture (1998)
  • The Idea of Culture (2000)
  • The Truth about the Irish (2001)
  • The Gatekeeper: A Memoir (2002)
  • Sweet Violence: The Idea of the Tragic (2002)
  • After Theory (2003)
  • Figures of Dissent: Reviewing Fish, Spivak, Zizek and Others (2003)
  • The English Novel: An Introduction (2005)
  • Holy Terror (2005)
  • The Meaning of Life (2007)
  • How to Read a Poem (2007)
  • Trouble with Strangers: A Study of Ethics (2008)
  • Literary Theory, Anniversary Edition (2008)
  • Reason, Faith, and Revolution: Reflections on the God Debate (2009)
  • The Task of the Critic: Terry Eagleton in Dialogue with Matthew Beaumont (2009)
  • On Evil (2010)
  • Why Marx Was Right (2011)
  • The Event of Literature (2012)
  • Across the Pond: An Englishman's View of America (2013)
  • How to Read Literature (2013)
  • Culture and the Death of God (2014)
  • Hope without Optimism (2015)
  • Culture (2016)
  • Materialism (2017)
  • Radical Sacrifice (2018)
  • Humour (2019)

References[edit]

  1. ^ abcdProf Terry Eagleton profile, Debrett’s People of Today, FBA ProfileArchived 24 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  2. ^Terry Eagleton (1991). Ideology: An Introduction. p. 131.
  3. ^ abcdefJames Smith (2013). Terry Eagleton. Wiley. ISBN978-0-7456-5795-0.
  4. ^ abcdJames Smith (2013). Terry Eagleton. John Wiley & Sons. ISBN978-0-7456-5795-0.
  5. ^ abVallely, Paul (13 October 2007). 'Terry Eagleton: Class warrior'. The Independent. ..the man who succeeded F R Leavis as Britain's most influential academic critic.
  6. ^John Sitter, Chairman of the English Department at the University of Notre Dame and Editor of The Cambridge Companion to Eighteenth Century Poetry, has describes Eagleton as 'someone widely regarded as the most influential contemporary literary critic and theorist in the English-speaking world' 'Archived copy'. Archived from the original on 31 August 2009. Retrieved 23 June 2009.CS1 maint: Archived copy as title (link)
  7. ^'Eagleton himself has also replaced Leavis as the best known and most influential academic critic in Britain.' Duke Maskell,[who?] as cited by Nicholas Wroe [1]
  8. ^'Terry Eagleton is arguably the most influential contemporary British literary critic and theorist.' James Smith.[who?] Cited in the Introduction to Terry Eagleton: A Critical Introduction (Key Contemporary Thinkers) Polity Press, 2008.
  9. ^'A theoretical blow for democracy'. 31 May 2001. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  10. ^ abUniversity, Lancaster. 'Terry Eagleton - English & Creative Writing - Lancaster University - Lancaster University'. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  11. ^'Professor Terry Eagleton'. College of Humanities & Social Science. University of Edinburgh. Archived from the original on 21 July 2011.
  12. ^'Terry Eagleton to speak at Newington Green'. Hackney Citizen. 29 August 2010. Retrieved 30 December 2011.
  13. ^'EAGLETON, Prof. Terence Francis' at Who's Who 2012, A & C Black, 2012; online edn, Oxford University Press, December 2011; online edn November 2011; accessed 23 September 2012
  14. ^Andrews, Kernan (18 December 2008). 'Terry Eagleton – taking on the capitalists and atheists in Galway'. Galway Advertiser.
  15. ^Barry, Peter. Beginning Theory: An Introduction to Literary and Cultural Theory. Manchester University Press, 2009, p. 273.
  16. ^LRB archive. But only six contributions from 2014 to 2017
  17. ^Eagleton, Terry (19 October 2006). 'Lunging, Flailing, Mispunching'. London Review of Books. 28 (20). Retrieved 26 November 2006.
  18. ^Eagleton, Terry (19 October 2006). 'Lunging, Flailing, Mispunching'. London Review of Books. 28 (20). Retrieved 1 September 2013.
  19. ^Terry Eagleton (lecturer) (1 April 2008). Christianity Fair and Foul (Podcast). Yale University. Event occurs at 6:23. Archived from the original(rm) on 6 August 2009. Retrieved 4 August 2009.
  20. ^Eagleton, Terry (April 2008). 'Faith and Fundamentalism: Is Belief in Richard Dawkins Necessary for Salvation?'. Dwight H. Terry Lectureship. Yale University. Archived from the original on 6 August 2009.
  21. ^Eagleton, Terry (2009). Reason, Faith, and Revolution: Reflections on the God Debate. New Haven/London: Yale University Press. ISBN978-0-300-15179-4.
  22. ^Eagleton, Terry (15 June 2010). 'Football: a dear friend to capitalism - Terry Eagleton'. Retrieved 29 June 2016.
  23. ^'The voice of experience'. Retrieved 10 November 2018.
  24. ^ abEagleton, Terry (10 October 2007). 'Rebuking obnoxious views is not just a personality kink'. The Guardian. London. Retrieved 1 July 2008.
  25. ^Alibhai-Brown, Yasmin (8 October 2007). 'It's time for civilised and honest engagement'. The Independent. Retrieved 1 September 2013.
  26. ^Brown, Jonathan (12 October 2007). 'Amis launches scathing response to accusations of Islamophobia'. The Independent. Retrieved 1 July 2008.
  27. ^ abCockcroft, Lucy (10 October 2007). 'Family defends 'racist' Sir Kingsley Amis'. The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 1 July 2008.
  28. ^Levy, Geoffrey (11 October 2007). 'Spicier than a novel, the literary feud raging between the Amis dynasty and the Marxist critic'. Mail Online.
  29. ^Deresiewicz, William (29 January 2004). 'The Business of Theory'. The Nation. Retrieved 29 October 2015.
  30. ^Lodge, David (27 May 2004). 'Goodbye to All That'(fee required). The New York Review of Books. Retrieved 1 July 2008.

Further reading[edit]

  • James Smith, 'Terry Eagleton', Polity, 2008.

External links[edit]

Wikiquote has quotations related to: Terry Eagleton
  • Why Marx Was Right – In his book 'Why Marx was Right', Eagleton makes the case for Marx's resurrection, challenging objections and explaining why his thought remains as relevant as ever.
  • 'High Priest of Lit Crit', The Guardian, 2 February 2002 – profile on the publication of Eagleton's memoir, The Gatekeeper
  • Some articles by Eagleton, London Review of Books website
  • Article on socialism at redpepper.org.uk
  • 'The roots of terror' at redpepper.org.uk
  • Shakespeare and the class struggle extract from Eagleton's 1979 play Brecht and Company.
  • Terry Eagleton at British Council: Literature
  • Tim Adams, 'The Armchair Revolutionary' (interview), The Observer, 16 December 2007
  • Dawkins/Eagleton knol by Klaus Rohde (Permanent dead link)
  • Jonathan Derbyshire, 'The Task of the Critic: Terry Eagleton in Dialogue', New Statesman, 11 March 2010
  • Terry Eagleton, 'In Praise of Marx' (article), The Chronicle Review, 10 April 2011
  • 'An Interview with Terry Eagleton (Oxonian Review)', with Alex Barker and Alex Niven
  • Terry Eagleton and Marxist Literary Criticism by Ian Birchall (1982)
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