Eliot And His Age : T.s. Eliot's Moral Imaginat... May 2026
: A delight in the perverse and subhuman, which Kirk saw in modern sensationalism and violence. Available Editions of the Report
Eliot lived through a period dominated by what he saw as destructive ideologies, including nationalism, Marxist solutions, and "social justice" movements that he believed stripped populations of their true identity. Eliot and his age : T.S. Eliot's moral imaginat...
: Physical copies are stocked by retailers like Strand Book Store , Greenlight Bookstore , and Skyhorse Publishing . : A delight in the perverse and subhuman,
Kirk borrowed the term "moral imagination" from Edmund Burke, defining it as the that enables a person to see beyond private experience to the "right order" of the soul and society. Kirk borrowed the term "moral imagination" from Edmund
: Specialized bulk orders are offered through Bulk Bookstore . The Relevance of T. S. Eliot | The Russell Kirk Center
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