T.S. Eliot and American philosophy : the Harvard years

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T.S. Eliot and American philosophy : the Harvard years

Manju Jain

Cambridge University Press, 1992

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Note

Bibliography: p. 313-332

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Manju Jain's innovative study of T. S. Eliot's Harvard years traces the genesis of his major literary, religious and intellectual preoccupations in his early work as a student of philosophy, and explores its influence on his poetic and critical practice. His concerns were located within the mainstream of Harvard philosophical debates, especially in relation to the controversy of science versus religion. These questions (and Eliot's work as he grappled with them) point forward to important debates in contemporary philosophy and hermeneutics. Drawing extensively on unpublished sources, Manju Jain offers answers to the questions of why Eliot failed to find satisfaction in an academic career devoted to philosophy, and why he abandoned the speculations of metaphysics for the dogmas of theology.

Table of Contents

  • Preface
  • Acknowledgements
  • Introduction
  • 1. Eliot and unitarianism
  • 2. Eliot and Harvard: 'An Attenuated Santayana'?
  • 3. Eliot, Babbitt, and Paris
  • 4. The 'Golden Age' of American Studies: Eliot's early philosophical studies
  • 5. Josiah Royce's seminar
  • 6. The 'varieties' of psychological and mystical experience
  • 7. Eliot, Bradley and Knowledge and Experience: 'that magnificent vision, into the apparent chaos'
  • Conclusion
  • Appendix
  • List of courses taken by Eliot while at Harvard
  • Notes
  • Bibliography.

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