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English Fiction & Prose Literature - General & Miscellaneous - Literary Criticism, Regional British History, Literary Theory - General & Miscellaneous, Critics & Historians - Literary Biography
F. R. Leavis by Ian MacKillop,I. D. MacKillop — book cover

F. R. Leavis

by Ian MacKillop, I. D. MacKillop
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Overview

Ian MacKillop captures all of F.R. Leavis, one of the most influential literary critics of the 20th century, in this engrossing biography to give readers a fascinating chronicle of the academic life at its dizzying pinnacle.

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Editorials

Booknews

An intellectual biography of one of the most influential literary critics in the 20th century. MacKillop (English, U. of Sheffield) documents Leavis's arrival at Cambridge after World War I when there was no separate English faculty, his influences by way of I.A. Richards and T.S. Eliot, and the controversial public debates in which Leavis and his wife were involved as they attended high tea within the cloistered walls of Cambridge's English village life. Originally published by Penguin Books. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Kirkus Reviews

A life of the eminent critic, a controversial figure whose ideas were influential wherever English was taught—except at Cambridge University, the institution that grudgingly employed him.

Indeed, F.R. Leavis (18951978) seemed to make a career of being snubbed by the university's English department. Of the Cambridge Critics, including rivals I.A. Richards and William Empson, Leavis had the longest exile, despite (or because of) such notable works of criticism as The Great Tradition and New Bearings in English Poetry. He was also for two decades the editor of Scrutiny, an influential journal. As former pupil MacKillop (English/Sheffield Univ., England) shows in this approving but not official biography, Leavis worked passionately to establish serious standards for the study of English literature, to counter both suffocating Oxbridge classicism and Bloomsbury dillettantism. With an unreliable part-time lectureship, and the help of his unofficial study group, the "Research Society," and of his equally erudite wife, Queenie (author of Fiction and the Reading Public), Leavis built his own intellectual elite within the university. Only very late in his career did he receive a stable position at Downing College. It did not lessen his combative spirit. Leavis's famous attack on C.P. Snow, whom he called "portentously ignorant," was part of a broader effort to keep education in the humanities from becoming a backwater in modern Britain. Yet, citing aesthetic principles, the complex Leavis, the preeminent Lawrence scholar, refused to join the fight to get the ban on Lady Chatterley's Lover lifted. Of the rebarbative Leavis's many sides explored here, the one most likely to stir immediate sympathy is his experiences on an ambulance train during WW I. MacKillop, as objective as a Leavisian can be, does not ignore his mentor's more embarrassing fallings-out with his college and with some of his protégés.

A thorough and candid examination from the academic trenches of the most combative of the Cambridge Critics.

Book Details

Published
May 1, 1997
Publisher
New York : St. Martin's Press, 1997.
Pages
488
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780312163570

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