Eliot And His Age : T.s. Eliot's Moral Imaginat... Page
Kirk uses Eliot's career to distinguish between three competing forces: : Guided by virtue, wisdom, and tradition.
Eliot lived through a period dominated by what he saw as destructive ideologies, including nationalism, Marxist solutions, and "social justice" movements that he believed stripped populations of their true identity.
Kirk borrowed the term "moral imagination" from Edmund Burke, defining it as the that enables a person to see beyond private experience to the "right order" of the soul and society. Eliot and his age : T.S. Eliot's moral imaginat...
: His work acted as a form of "Socratic self-criticism," disturbing a society drifting toward moral bankruptcy.
: It aims to teach human beings their true nature and dignity through literature and art. Kirk uses Eliot's career to distinguish between three
: A 2nd edition ebook published by ISI Books (July 2023) is available at Barnes & Noble and PressReader .
: Kirk identifies the subjects of Eliot's poem The Hollow Men as those lacking moral imagination, instead enslaved by appetites and "diabolic" distractions. : His work acted as a form of
In his seminal work Eliot and His Age: T. S. Eliot’s Moral Imagination in the Twentieth Century , Russell Kirk frames T.S. Eliot as the preeminent man of letters who used "moral imagination" to confront the spiritual and cultural decay of the 1900s. The Core Concept: Moral Imagination