|

Home > Book Accessories > Covers > Item 29
 |
|
 |
 |
Great Books
|
by David Denby
Sales Rank: 150294

|
List Price: $16.00
$10.88
At Amazon on 10-28-2008
|
|
Paperback: 496 pages
Publisher: Simon & Schuster September 25, 1997
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0684835339
ISBN-13: 978-0684835334
Product Dimensions:
9.1 x 6.2 x 1 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.4 pounds
Product Review
David Denby, New York city movie critic and journalist, entered Columbia University in 1991 to take the university's famous course in "Great Books." This is the course that, in preserving the notion of the western canon without apology to multiculturalists and feminists, has been an unlikely focus of America's culture war in recent years. Where other universities have caved in and revised or enlarged the canon, Columbia's course has remained intact. Denby's intention as a writer and protagonist in the culture war was to record the experience and the personal impact of the course. He has produced a cry from the heart in favor of the classics of western civilization, relaying with infectious enthusiasm how literature touched his soul.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Publishers Weekly
Does a great books canon exist? Left-wing critics denounce the notion of a canon, while right-wingers often use it to assert unquestioned Western supremacy. This superb book suggests an answer. Denby, the film critic for New York magazine, returned to his alma mater, Columbia University, after 30 years to retake the two core curriculum courses, grapple with the world's classics and regenerate his own lapsed reading habit. It is a heartening portrait of (elite) American education and a substantial?sometimes enthralling?read. His teachers are committed pedagogues, the students a diverse (religious faith separates more than does ethnicity) and thoughtful lot. But the students are young, and the book's richest moments are when the mature Denby engages with the texts. Reading the tragedy of Oedipus Rex, he feels anxious, recognizing the ironic truth "[W]hat we avoid, we become." Hobbes's comments on the state of nature lead Denby to muse on insider trading and the time he was mugged. He contrasts Beauvoir's call for female liberty with the "Take Back the Night" antirape march on campus. Denby steps aside to interview academics and analyze the debate about the canon; he acknowledges that white male critics too long ignored the likes of Virginia Woolf, but resolutely argues for the seeking out of all great books, not merely ones that represent excluded groups. Why? Because the "Western classics were at war with each other," and learning to read Hegel and Marx, or the Bible and Nietzsche, is no lesson in indoctrination but the beginning of "an ethically strenuous education" and "a set of bracing intellectual habits." Author tour. Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
|
Great Books
Available from Amazon
Price: $10.88
Updated on 10-28-2008

|
|
 |
|
 |
NOTICE: All product prices, availability, and specifications are subject to verification by their respective retailers.
Copyright © 2008 Dominant Systems Corporation
info@bookdigger.com
Privacy Policy
Last Modified : 10-28-2008
|