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- Title
On the Possibility of the Aesthetic Life: Terry Eagleton, Cather's Tom Outland, and the Experience of Loss.
- Authors
Ellwanger, Adam
- Abstract
In ''The Marxist Sublime,'' Terry Eagleton argues that capitalist rationality has diminished the human ability to experience the aesthetic as bodily sensuousness. He advocates a Marxist reorganization of society as a means of reactivating the body's receptivity to pleasure by claiming that a ''revolution in thought'' might enable an existence defined by the omnipresence of aesthetic experience. Willa Cather's "The Professor's House" poses a significant challenge to such an idea. Through the novel's embedded narrative, ''Tom Outland's Story,'' Cather complicates the idealization of aesthetic life by demonstrating that the experience of loss is the structural heart of aesthetic response.
- Subjects
MARXIST Sublime, The (Book); EAGLETON, Terry, 1943-; PROFESSOR'S House, The (Book : Cather); CATHER, Willa, 1873-1947; AESTHETICS; REASON in literature; 20TH century (Literary period)
- Publication
Journal of Modern Literature, 2012, Vol 35, Issue 2, p52
- ISSN
0022-281X
- Publication type
Literary Criticism
- DOI
10.2979/jmodelite.35.2.52