• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • Sport
  • Cricket
  • Odisha
Book Review: What The Critical Thunder Said; Lessons From The Past

Book Review: What The Critical Thunder Said; Lessons From The Past

3 years ago
School Curriculum, Textbooks From Class 1 To 12 To Be Revamped In Odisha

School Curriculum, Textbooks From Class 1 To 12 To Be Revamped In Odisha

8 minutes ago
Tharoor Only Congress Leader Invited To Dine With Putin At Rashtrapati Bhavan; Miffed Congress Cries Foul After He Accepts

Tharoor Only Congress Leader Invited To Dine With Putin At Rashtrapati Bhavan; Miffed Congress Cries Foul After He Accepts

28 minutes ago
Nothing Is New…: ‘Dhurandhar’ Might Be ‘Inspired’ By Major Mohit Sharma, Says Actor Rakesh Bedi

Nothing Is New…: ‘Dhurandhar’ Might Be ‘Inspired’ By Major Mohit Sharma, Says Actor Rakesh Bedi

49 minutes ago
Odisha MP Sambit Patra Fires Back At TMC Over ‘Deportation Of Bengali Speakers’ Claim

Odisha MP Sambit Patra Fires Back At TMC Over ‘Deportation Of Bengali Speakers’ Claim

56 minutes ago
In Major Boost For India’s Nuclear Power Sector, Putin Announces Largest Plant In Tamil Nadu

In Major Boost For India’s Nuclear Power Sector, Putin Announces Largest Plant In Tamil Nadu

1 hour ago
Dr Laxmi Bai’s 100th Birthday Celebrated In Grand Style; President Murmu Wishes Her Through Personal Note

Dr Laxmi Bai’s 100th Birthday Celebrated In Grand Style; President Murmu Wishes Her Through Personal Note

1 hour ago
Odisha Govt Invites Bids For e-Auction Of 12 Virgin Mineral Blocks In 4 Districts

Odisha Govt Invites Bids For e-Auction Of 12 Virgin Mineral Blocks In 4 Districts

2 hours ago
Indigo meltdown

IndiGo Crisis: Govt Orders High-Level Inquiry, Expects Complete Restoration In 3 Days

2 hours ago
‘I Am Busy Taking Care Of Aaradhya, Being With Abhishek…’: Aishwarya Rai On Not Signing Films

‘I Am Busy Taking Care Of Aaradhya, Being With Abhishek…’: Aishwarya Rai On Not Signing Films

2 hours ago
Rajya sabha MP from Odisha Sujeet Kumar

‘Decolonise Indian Textbooks’: Odisha MP Sujeet Kumar Calls For Dropping Of ‘Lord’ Title For British Rulers

2 hours ago
Odisha ANM Exam Postponed After Congress MLA Claims ‘Paper Leak’ In Assembly

Odisha ANM Exam Postponed After Congress MLA Claims ‘Paper Leak’ In Assembly

2 hours ago
India And Russia Have Agreed To Economic Cooperation Programme Till 2030: PM Modi

India And Russia Have Agreed To Economic Cooperation Programme Till 2030: PM Modi

2 hours ago
  • Home
  • About us
  • Career
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Usage
Friday, December 5, 2025
No Result
View All Result
OdishaBytes
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review
No Result
View All Result
OdishaBytes
No Result
View All Result
Home Literature Book Review

Book Review: What The Critical Thunder Said; Lessons From The Past

by Himansu S Mohapatra
November 7, 2022
in Book Review, Literature
Reading Time: 4 mins read
Book Review: What The Critical Thunder Said; Lessons From The Past
491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

Terry Eagleton, in the book under review, has written about five British critics of the last century who, by general consent, revolutionized the reading of English literature before the so-called theoretical revolution held sway from the 1960s. These critics have now been forgotten in academia. Eagleton wishes in his book to recall these pre-theory critics, T.S. Eliot, I.A. Richards, William Empson, F.R. Leavis and Raymond Williams. He claims that it still makes an awful lot of sense to see literature, as these five did, as an index of the moral health of society, and, to develop a feel for the words themselves in which that moral sense was articulated.

It may be remembered that TS Eliot, IA Richards, William Empson, FR Leavis and Raymond Williams helped to end the era of what has been called ‘easygoing connoisseurs and usher in the era of professional criticism, marked by rigorous analysis. All of them, except for the first figure, TS Eliot, were associated with the University of Cambridge. Products of the Tripos Reform at Cambridge in the second decade of the twentieth century, they, in their turn, played a stellar role in establishing English literature as a serious subject of academic study at Cambridge. The project was then implemented in the rest of England and spread world wide. In India in the 1960s and 1970s, for instance, Eliot and Leavis were iconic figures and were quoted by every English teacher to clinch an argument. Leavis’s student at Cambridge, CD Narasimhaih who became a formidable professor of English and a champion of Commonwealth Literature, circulated his teacher’s critical ideas avidly.

ADVERTISEMENT

The critical tools marshalled by these critics included ‘tradition’, impersonality’ and unification of sensibility’ (Eliot), ‘practical criticism’, ‘close reading’ (Richards), ‘ambiguity’ (Empson), ‘the concrete ’, ‘felt life’, ‘literary criticism’ (Leavis) and ‘structure of feeling’ (Williams).  Strictly speaking, the last named, Raymond Williams, coming late, was not a contributor to this formative period as such, but an inheritor and sustainer of these Cambridge critics’ legacy. He later rebelled against it in trying to act out his socialist convictions. Eagleton has brought out the significance of Williams’s distinctive contribution to the now prevalent ‘historicist paradigm’ in the last chapter of his book, while not forgetting to point out how tone-deaf he is to literary music.

The core of the book, however, consists of the first four chapters on Eliot, Richards, Empson and Leavis. The focus is on how they contributed, in their diverse ways —Eliot was an anti-Romantic who nourished  a Romantic core, Richards and Empson were rationalists, and Leavis was an instinctualist—to the development of what has been called a ‘critical paradigm.’ Admittedly he told this story in some of his acclaimed earlier books but from a vantage ground of theoretically informed ideological analysis, imported mainly from France, which served mainly to discredit these pioneers for their elitism, sexism, and ‘little Englandism’ (the charge last named was mainly levelled against F.R. Leavis). Williams was initially lumped together with them and brusquely dismissed, but was later resurrected and hailed as a pioneer of several new trends which morphed into today’s much talked about stances of cultural study and ecology.

The revolution, wrought by the first four—a project which Williams helped to extend—was one which saw the arts and humanities rise to a central position in the education system thanks to their vitalist and moral concerns which were conspicuously lacking in science and other non-literary subjects.  This is best exemplified by two defining statements, one by T.S. Eliot t (‘poetry purifies the dialect of the tribe’), and, the other by I.A. Richards (‘there is a relationship between our appreciation of the arts and our general fitness for a humane existence’).

The philosophy dictated a reading method known as ‘close reading’ to which all five paid deep allegiance, though the term was Richards’. The essence of ‘close reading’ was this: the rich and complex experience that poetry or art embodies is enshrined in a ‘non-denotational’ language, one marked by what Empson termed ‘ambiguity’ and Richards called ‘pseudo-statement’. It can, therefore, be demonstrably brought out through rigorous attention to the ‘words on the page’. The ideal—or ideology if you like—of the literary study was thus fully formulated and the royal road was put in place for the study of literature as a ‘discipline of thought’.

The above term is Leavis’s. Eagleton provides an excellent summing up of the way in which the poetics of Eliot, Richards and Empson received pedagogical formulation by Leavis: “The way to reform a degraded society, then, was through education. The main engine of education was the university; at the core of the universities lay the humanities; the queen of humanities was literature, and the royal road to literature was literary criticism (p. 250).” Surely no better justification for the study of liberal arts and literature has been proposed since. The theoretical revolution too abides by this insight in its undoing of the division between literature and criticism.

The critical revolutionaries, celebrated in Eagleton’s book with ‘five expert pen portraits’, were exemplary here. They kept their alert eye on every trick and stratagem that the market used and found in literary language a model of critical and moral intelligence that could see through the manipulation.  In paying a spirited tribute to Eliot, Richards, Empson, Leavis and Williams, Eagleton has revived this golden age of modern criticism and demonstrated its renewed relevance.

Critical Revolutionaries. Five Critics Who Changed the Way We Read. Terry Eagleton. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2022. Pp. 323.

Share196Tweet123
ADVERTISEMENT
Himansu S Mohapatra

Himansu S Mohapatra

A former Professor of English & noted translator

Related Posts

Odisha governor releases Achyuta samnata book

Former Odisha Governor Ganeshi Lal Releases Achyuta Samanta’s Book ‘Mo Maa Mo Prerana’

by OB Bureau
December 2, 2025

Bhubaneswar: Former Odisha Governor Prof. Ganeshi Lal released KIIT and KISS Founder Dr Achyuta Samanta’s latest book ‘Mo Maa Mo...

Javed Akhtar SOA Sahitya Samman award

Odisha Governor Presents Javed Akhtar 1st SOA Sahitya Samman Award As Literary Festival Begins

by OB Bureau
November 29, 2025

Bhubaneswar: Legendary poet, writer, scriptwriter and thinker Javed Akhtar was conferred the first SOA (Siksha ‘O’ Anusandhan) Sahitya Samman award...

Javed Akhtar SOA Sahitya Samman

Javed Akhtar To Be Honoured With SOA Sahitya Samman At Bhubaneswar On Saturday

by OB Bureau
November 27, 2025

Bhubaneswar: Legendary poet, writer, lyricist and scriptwriter Javed Akhtar will be honoured with the SOA Sahitya Samman for 2025 on...

Odia author for Bal Bharati Puraskar

Odia Author Rajakishore Parhi Selected For Bal Sahitya Puraskar-2025

by OB Bureau
November 12, 2025

Bhubaneswar: Odisha’s Rajakishore Parhi is among 24 authors selected for the Bal Sahitya Puraskar-2025. Parhi will be honoured for his poetry...

OdishaBytes

Copyright © 2025 Frontier Media

Navigate Site

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • News Feed

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Odisha
    • Policy & Politics
    • City
  • India
  • Sport
    • Cricket
    • Football
    • Hockey
    • IPL
  • Entertainment
    • Music
    • Movie Review
    • Television
    • Bollywood
    • Hollywood
    • Ollywood
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
    • Travel
    • Food
    • Health
    • fashion
  • World
  • More
    • News You Can Use
    • Good News
    • Viral Videos
    • Tech
      • Cars & Bikes
      • Mobile & Gadgets
      • Review

Copyright © 2025 Frontier Media