Eliot And His Age : T.s. Eliot's Moral Imaginat... -
: Rooted in Jean-Jacques Rousseau; it rejects old dogmas for "emancipation" from duty, often ending in disillusionment.
: Eliot used this imagination to describe the "abyss" society falls into when it rejects inner and outer order. Eliot vs. His Age Eliot and his age : T.S. Eliot's moral imaginat...
: Specialized bulk orders are offered through Bulk Bookstore . The Relevance of T. S. Eliot | The Russell Kirk Center : Rooted in Jean-Jacques Rousseau; it rejects old
: His work acted as a form of "Socratic self-criticism," disturbing a society drifting toward moral bankruptcy. His Age : Specialized bulk orders are offered
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