Culture and Anarchy: An Essay in Political and Social Criticism

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Cambridge University Press, 24.11.2011 - 338 Seiten
By the middle of the nineteenth century, culture was often considered to be nothing but a meaningless 'smattering of Latin and Greek'. In this work, first published in 1869, Matthew Arnold (1822-88) redefines culture as a striving for 'the best that has been thought or said', and as a contrast to 'philistinism' and the over-valuation of the practical. Critical of the uninspiring lifestyles of many of his religious and non-religious contemporaries, he raises the controversial issue of how to lead a good life, aesthetically, intellectually and morally. He introduces a middle road between classical and Judaeo-Christian ideals ('Hellenism' and 'Hebraism') which promotes the state over the individual, a position that has often prompted his critics to consider him an authoritarian thinker. A fascinating piece of social and political criticism, and an adjunct to Arnold's poetry, this work was both controversial when it was first published, and enormously influential thereafter.

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Inhalt

Abschnitt 1
i
Abschnitt 2
xvii
Abschnitt 3
5
Abschnitt 4
17
Abschnitt 5
51
Abschnitt 6
81
Abschnitt 7
93
Abschnitt 8
142
Abschnitt 9
166
Abschnitt 10
197
Abschnitt 11
241
Abschnitt 12
256
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