Description

Book Synopsis
To be or not to be free, that is the question, the English question, the question of what is academic English at the beginning of the 21st century. So argues Thomas Docherty in this new and important new study, a study that begins with the claim that the fundamental idea governing the institution of the University is a will to freedom. Tracing a history of the modern European University from Vico onwards and including Hume, Rousseau, Schiller, Hegel, Schopenhauer, Newman, Alain, Benda and Jaspers, the author argues the academy's will to freedom is grounded in study of the 'eloquence' that has shaped literate and humane values. He goes on to explore the current condition of English as a literary discipline, arguing that literary studies is (or should be) a search for the unknown; and that in only that search can the academy establish the real meaning -- or meanings -- of social, political and ethical freedom.

Table of Contents
The English Question; The Fate of Culture: Die Welt ist Alles; On Reading; The Question Concerning Literature; For a Literature that is Without and Beyond Compare; Newman: The University and Universalism; The Existence of' Scotland; On Critical Humility; Clandestine English; Index.

English Question: Or Academic Freedoms

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    A Hardback by Thomas Docherty

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      View other formats and editions of English Question: Or Academic Freedoms by Thomas Docherty

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 18/12/2007
      ISBN13: 9781845191320, 978-1845191320
      ISBN10: 1845191323

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      To be or not to be free, that is the question, the English question, the question of what is academic English at the beginning of the 21st century. So argues Thomas Docherty in this new and important new study, a study that begins with the claim that the fundamental idea governing the institution of the University is a will to freedom. Tracing a history of the modern European University from Vico onwards and including Hume, Rousseau, Schiller, Hegel, Schopenhauer, Newman, Alain, Benda and Jaspers, the author argues the academy's will to freedom is grounded in study of the 'eloquence' that has shaped literate and humane values. He goes on to explore the current condition of English as a literary discipline, arguing that literary studies is (or should be) a search for the unknown; and that in only that search can the academy establish the real meaning -- or meanings -- of social, political and ethical freedom.

      Table of Contents
      The English Question; The Fate of Culture: Die Welt ist Alles; On Reading; The Question Concerning Literature; For a Literature that is Without and Beyond Compare; Newman: The University and Universalism; The Existence of' Scotland; On Critical Humility; Clandestine English; Index.

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