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RESULTSSearching enCompass books for 'Terry Eagleton'... We found 3 matches.
Terry Eagleton
The Gatekeeper A memoir in which our hero blends autobiography with moral, political and cultural reflections. Thoughts about God, evil, suffering, death and tragedy are interwoven with comic or moving scenes from the author's life; his bizarre experiences as a young altar server in a convent of enclosed nuns; his precarious career in 1960s cambridge as one of the few working-class students among a set of public school boys; his abortive experience of life in aseminary. Eagleton was brought up in Salford, Lancashire, in a working-class University. His book discloses the more personal, spiritual side of a well-known cultural thinker; mixing the serious with the hilarious, life with ideas, the personal with the political.
Allen Lane The Penguin Press 2002 hbk £9.99 ISBN 0-7139-9590-4
Author details available at http://www.contemporarywriters.com/authors/?p=authC2D9C28A1123b1D819TsK1844CB4
http://www.mv.helsinki.fi/home/kniemela/eaglelin.htm http://education.guardian.co.uk/higher/books/story/0,10595,634523,00.html http://books.guardian.co.uk/digestedread/story/0,6550,639326,00.html
Terry Eagleton
Holy Terror Holy Terror is a profound and timely investigation of the idea of terror, drawing upon political, philosophical, literary, and theological sources, to trace a genealogy from the ancient world to the modern day. Rather than add to the mounting pile of political studies of terrorism, Terry Eagleton offers here a metaphysics of terror with a serious historical perspective. Writing with remarkable clarity and persuasive insight, he examines a concept whose cultural impact predates 9/11 by millennia. From its earliest manifestations in rite and ritual, through the French Revolution to the 'War on Terror' of today, terror has been regarded with both horror and fascination. Eagleton examines the duality of the sacred (both life-giving and death-dealing) and relates it, via current and past ideas of freedom, to the idea of terror itself. Stretching from the cult of Dionysus to the thought of Jacques Lacan, the book takes in en route ideas of God, freedom, the sublime, and the unconscious. It also examines the problem of evil, and devotes a concluding chapter to the idea of tragic sacrifice and the scapegoat.
Oxford University Press 2005 hbk £12.99 ISBN 0-19-928717-1
![]() Author photo: © Oxford University Press
Terry Eagleton
The Meaning of Life The phrase 'the meaning of life' for many seems a quaint notion fit for satirical mauling by Monty Python or Douglas Adams. But in this spirited, stimulating, and quirky enquiry, famed critic Terry Eagleton takes a serious if often amusing look at the question and offers his own surprising answer. Eagleton first examines how centuries of thinkers and writers--from Marx and Schopenhauer to Shakespeare, Sartre, and Beckett--have responded to the ultimate question of meaning. He suggests, however, that it is only in modern times that the question has become problematic.
Oxford University Press 2007 hbk £10.99 ISBN 978-0199210701
Oxford University Press 2008 pbk £6.99 ISBN 978-0199532179
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