Please note: In order to keep Hive up to date and provide users with the best features, we are no longer able to fully support Internet Explorer. The site is still available to you, however some sections of the site may appear broken. We would encourage you to move to a more modern browser like Firefox, Edge or Chrome in order to experience the site fully.

T. S. Eliot and Christian Tradition, Hardback Book

T. S. Eliot and Christian Tradition Hardback

Edited by Benjamin G. Lockerd

Hardback

Description

T. S. Eliot was raised in the Unitarian faith of his family in St.

Louis but drifted away from their beliefs while studying philosophy, mysticism, and anthropology at Harvard.

During a year in Paris, he became involved with a group of Catholic writers and subsequently went through a gradual conversion to Catholic Christianity. Many studies of Eliot's writings have mentioned his religious beliefs, but most have failed to give the topic due weight, and many have misunderstood or misrepresented his faith.

More recently, scholars have begun exploring this dimension of Eliot's thought more carefully and fully.

In this book readers will find Eliot's Anglo-Catholicism accurately defined and thoughtfully considered.

Essays illuminate the all-important influence of the French Catholic writers he came to know in Paris.

Prominent among them were those who wrote for or were otherwise associated with the Nouvelle Revue Française, including André Gide, Paul Claudel, and Charles-Louis Philippe.

Also active in Paris at that time was the notorious Charles Maurras, whose influence on Eliot has been exaggerated by those who wished to discredit Eliot's traditionalist views.

A more measured assessment of Maurras's influence has been needed and is found in several essays here.

A wiser French Catholic writer, Jacques Maritain, has been largely ignored by Eliot scholars, but his influence is now given due consideration.

The keynote of Eliot's cultural and political writings is his belief that religion and culture are integrally related.

Several contributors examine his ideas on this subject, placing them in the context of Maritain's ideas, as well as those of the Catholic historian Christopher Dawson. Contributors take account of Eliot's intellectual relationship with such figures as John Henry Newman, Charles Williams, and the expert on church architecture, W.

R. Lethaby. Eliot's engagement with other contemporaries who held a variety of Christian beliefs—including George Santayana, Paul Elmer More, C.

S. Lewis, and David Jones—is also explored. This collection presents the subject of Eliot's religious beliefs in rich detail, from a number of different perspectives, giving readers the opportunity to see the topic in its complexity and fullness.

Information

Save 4%

£97.00

£92.49

 
Free Home Delivery

on all orders

 
Pick up orders

from local bookshops

Information