: A delight in the perverse and subhuman, which Kirk saw in modern sensationalism and violence. Available Editions of the Report
For those looking to study Kirk’s full analysis, several versions of the book are available: Eliot and his age : T.S. Eliot's moral imaginat...
: It aims to teach human beings their true nature and dignity through literature and art. : A delight in the perverse and subhuman,
: Rooted in Jean-Jacques Rousseau; it rejects old dogmas for "emancipation" from duty, often ending in disillusionment. In his seminal work Eliot and His Age: T
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
: His work acted as a form of "Socratic self-criticism," disturbing a society drifting toward moral bankruptcy.