4973dc5
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After all, if you do not resist the apparently inevitable, you will never know how inevitable the inevitable was.
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socialism
inspirational
inevitability
apathy
marxism
capitalism
resistance
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Terry Eagleton |
514329b
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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.
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socialism
politics
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Terry Eagleton |
cbc093d
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Genuine equality means not treating everyone the same, but attending equally to everyone's different needs.
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socialism
equality
social-justice
marxism
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Terry Eagleton |
e14f054
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Historical determinism is a recipe for political quietism.
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history
politics
historical-determinism
apolitical
apathy
marxism
determinism
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Terry Eagleton |
25ee4a9
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If it is true that we need a degree of certainty to get by, it is also true that too much of the stuff can be lethal.
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life
dogmatism
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Terry Eagleton |
c86104d
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Negativity is often looked upon [in the USA] as a kind of thought crime. Not since the advent of socialist realism has the world witnessed such pathological upbeatness.
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zealousness
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Terry Eagleton |
bd02045
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Capitalism will behave antisocially if it is profitable for it to do so, and that can now mean human devastation on an unimaginable scale. What used to be apocalyptic fantasy is today no more than sober realism....
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Terry Eagleton |
c5d8f72
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The New Testament is a brutal destroyer of human illusions. If you follow Jesus and don't end up dead, it appears you have some explaining to do. The stark signifier of the human condition is one who spoke up for love and justice and was done to death for his pains. The traumatic truth of human history is a mutilated body.
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Terry Eagleton |
055fe99
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What we consume now is not objects or events, but our experience of them. Just as we never need to leave our cars, so we never need to leave our own skulls. The experience is already out there, as ready-made as a pizza, as bluntly objective as a boulder, and all we need to do is receive it. It is as though there is an experience hanging in the air, waiting for a human subject to come alone and have it. Niagara Falls, Dublin Castle and the G..
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Terry Eagleton |
14764ef
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In the deep night of metaphysics, all cats look black.
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metaphysics
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Terry Eagleton |
ea38497
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Successful revolutions are those which end up by erasing all traces of themselves.
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politics
marxism
revolution
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Terry Eagleton |
18c02b9
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The Kantian imperative to have the courage to think for oneself has involved a contemptuous disregard for the resources of tradition and an infantile view of authority as inherently oppressive.
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rationalism
individualism
tradition
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Terry Eagleton |
3bbfd79
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If we are inspired only by literature that reflects our own interests, all reading becomes a form of narcissism.
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Terry Eagleton |
40759be
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Being brought up in a culture is a matter of learning appropriate forms of feeling as much as particular ways of thinking.
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Terry Eagleton |
1731a28
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Astonishingly, we are saved not by a special apparatus known as religion, but by the quality of our everyday relations with one another.
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Terry Eagleton |
aee7a56
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We like to think of individuals as unique. Yet if this is true of everyone, then we all share the same quality, namely our uniqueness. What we have in common is the fact that we are all uncommon. Everybody is special, which means that nobody is. The truth, however, is that human beings are uncommon only up to a point. There are no qualities that are peculiar to one person alone. Regrettably, there could not be a world in which only one indi..
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individuality
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Terry Eagleton |
0d438db
|
You can tell that the capitalist system is in trouble when people start talking about capitalism.
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Terry Eagleton |
ca9254b
|
All communication involves faith; indeed, some linguisticians hold that the potential obstacles to acts of verbal understanding are so many and diverse that it is a minor miracle that they take place at all.
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faith
linguistics
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Terry Eagleton |
5638ed2
|
We live in a world in which there is nothing that cannot be narrated, but nothing that needs to be either.
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Terry Eagleton |
805032e
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Scratch a schoolboy and you find a savage.
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Terry Eagleton |
f1eeedd
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If this constant sliding and hiding of meaning were true of conscious life, then we would of course never be able to speak coherently at all. If the whole of language were present to me when I spoke, then I would not be able to articulate anything at all. The ego, or consciousness, can therefore only work by repressing this turbulent activity, provisionally nailing down words on to meanings. Every now and then a word from the unconscious wh..
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meaning
freudian-slips
parapraxis
lacan
discourse
unconscious
psychoanalysis
language
consciousness
failure
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Terry Eagleton |
29db738
|
In the pragmatist, streetwise climate of advanced postmodern capitalism, with its scepticism of big pictures and grand narratives, its hard-nosed disenchantment with the metaphysical, 'life' is one among a whole series of discredited totalities. We are invited to think small rather than big - ironically, at just the point when some of those out to destroy Western civilization are doing exactly the opposite. In the conflict between Western c..
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faith
religion
life
philosophy
grand-narratives
islamic-fundamentalism
philosophical-scepticism
western-world
western-culture
metaphysics
islamic-terrorism
belief
capitalism
islam
islamism
pragmatism
postmodernism
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Terry Eagleton |
17f6684
|
A] great deal of what we believe we do not know firsthand; instead we have faith in the knowledge of specialists.
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knowledge
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Terry Eagleton |
c70c4f6
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It is capitalism, not Marxism, that trades in futures.
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future
criticisms-of-marxism
futures-exchange
utopianism
marxism
capitalism
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Terry Eagleton |
420ff9c
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The most common mistake students of literature make is to go straight for what the poem or novel says, setting aside the way that it says it. To read like this is to set aside the 'literariness' of the work - the fact that it is a poem or play or novel, rather than an account of the incidence of soil erosion in Nebraska.
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Terry Eagleton |
ef91a53
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The imagination is also sometimes commended for offering us in vicarious form experiences which we are unable to enjoy at first hand. If you can't afford an air ticket to Kuala Lumpur, you can always read Conrad and imagine yourself in South-East Asia. If you have been monotonously married for forty years, you can always lay furtive hands on a copy of James Joyce's letters. Literature on this view is a kind of supplement to our unavoidably ..
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Terry Eagleton |
e0b40ef
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Language, the unconscious, the parents, the symbolic order: these terms in Lacan are not exactly synonymous, but they are intimately allied. They are sometimes spoken of by him as the 'Other' -- as that which like language is always anterior to us and will always escape us, that which brought us into being as subjects in the first place but which always outruns our grasp. We have seen that for Lacan our unconscious desire is directed toward..
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otherness
psychonanlysis
the-symbolic
lacan
unconscious
the-other
language
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Terry Eagleton |
ecc9ffb
|
The celebrated opening image of 'The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock' is another case in point: Let us go then, you and I, When the evening is spread out against the sky Like a patient etherised upon a table... How, the reader wonders, can the evening look like an anaesthetised body? Yet the point surely lies as much in the force of this bizarre image as in its meaning. We are in a modern world in which settled correspondences or traditiona..
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Terry Eagleton |
499cac4
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It is always reassuring to discover that great writers are as fallible as oneself. W.B. Yeats once failed to obtain an academic post in Dublin because he misspelt the word 'professor' on his application.
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Terry Eagleton |
eab9cb3
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Certain American uses of deconstruction, Derrida has observed, work to ensure 'an institutional closure' which serves the dominant political and economic interests of American society. Derrida is clearly out to do more than develop new techniques of reading: deconstruction is for him an ultimately political practice, an attempt to dismantle the logic by which a particular system of thought, and behind that a whole system of political struct..
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meaning
truth
derrida
deconstruction
relativism
language
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Terry Eagleton |
ef75f05
|
The theatre can teach us some truth, but it is the truth of the illusory nature of our existence. It can alert us to the dream-like quality of our lives, their brevity, mutability and lack of solid grounds. As such, by reminding us of our mortality, it can foster in us the virtue of humility.
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Terry Eagleton |
26feb63
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A poem is a piece of semiotic sport, in which the signifier has been momentarily released from its grim communicative labours and can disport itself disgracefully. Freed from a loveless marriage to a single meaning, it can play the field, wax promiscous, gambol outrageously with similar unattached signifiers. If the guardians of conventional morality knew what scandalous stuff they were inscribing on their tombstones, they would cease to do..
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poetry
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Terry Eagleton |
b4c916d
|
Enjoyment is more subjective than evaluation. Whether you prefer peaches to pears is a question of taste, which is not quite true of whether you think Dostoevsky a more accomplished novelist than John Grisham. Dostoevsky is better than Grisham in the sense that Tiger Woods is a better golfer than Lady Gaga.
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lady-gaga
john-grisham
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Terry Eagleton |
daa8a62
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It is said that an eighteenth-century bishop who read Jonathan Swift's novel threw the book into the fire, indignantly declaring that he didn't believe a word of it. He obviously thought that the story was meant to be true, but suspected that it was invented. Which, of course, is just what it is. The bishop was dismissing the fiction because he thought it was fiction.
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Terry Eagleton |
cfee841
|
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.
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Terry Eagleton |
dc779dc
|
Literary figures have no pre-history. It is said that a theatre director who was staging one of Harold Pinter's plays asked the playwright for some hints as to what his characters were up to before they came on stage. Pinter's reply was 'Mind your own fucking business.
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Terry Eagleton |
35cb4e2
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Deconstruction... insists not that truth is illusory but that it is institutional.
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Terry Eagleton |
9414ece
|
It is difficult to think of an origin without wanting to go back beyond it.
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Terry Eagleton |
9c1f1df
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Schizophrenic language has in this sense an interesting resemblance to poetry.
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Terry Eagleton |
077f3ad
|
All desire springs from a lack, which it strives continually to fill.
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Terry Eagleton |
33c35fb
|
Any attempt to define literary theory in terms of a distinctive method is doomed to failure.
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Terry Eagleton |
7c9c993
|
What perished in the Soviet Union was Marxist only in the sense that the Inquisition was Christian"
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Terry Eagleton |
7500e97
|
History works itself out by an inevitable internal logic.
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Terry Eagleton |
d3af0b0
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The truth is that the past exists no more than the future, even though it feels as though it does.
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Terry Eagleton |