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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Robert EaglestonePublisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 0.471kg ISBN: 9780367564728ISBN 10: 0367564726 Pages: 204 Publication Date: 23 November 2021 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIntroduction: Plato and Aristotle for and as literature 1. Three words: Polis and Logos Part One: ‘WHat is truly written in the soul’: Plato 2. Plato’s literary devices 3. Watching The Republic 4. Responding to The Republic 5. Living and dead words: Phaedrus 6. A hermeneutic dialectic? Ion, Protagoras Part Two: ‘The lover of stories is a lover of wisdom’: Aristotle 7. Reading Aristotle, from beginnings to ends 8. How to live: happiness, the virtues and literature: Nicomachean Ethics 9. Everyday People: The Rhetoric 10. Patterns of Literature, patterns of life: the Poetics 11. But what, after all, is entertainment? The pleasures of literature: The Poetics Conclusion: StartingReviews'Everyone ought to know something about Plato and Aristotle. Robert Eaglestone explains why this is especially so for students of literature and carefully guides them through the key ideas of these two giants of Greek philosophy. Accessible, engaging, and highly recommended.' Dr John Sellars, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK 'Robert Eaglestone doesn’t just advocate a literary approach to Plato and Aristotle, his own book enacts a literary philosophy. His writing brims with meaningful metaphors and scenes captured from everyday life and elevated to profound conceptual contemplation….His own gift is to urge us to study literature with Plato and Aristotle and to put us back in touch with literature’s truth and its wonder.' Professor Miriam Leonard, UCL, UK 'Robert Eagletone's wide-ranging and compellingly written book introduces Plato and Aristotle to the literary reader, showing not only how poets have drawn on ancient philosophy in the centuries since but also how the philosophers themselves can be open to a literary critical analysis. In other words, they can be read against the grain… These kinds of questions and conversations are provoked by the open-ended, intellectually generous nature of Truth and Wonder and I'm sure it will stimulate many interesting discussions to come.' Professor Jennifer Wallace, Cambridge University, UK 'The book beautifully illustrates the importance of thinking hard about what Plato and Aristotle have to say about literature while also thinking hard about how they say it – by reading their works ‘as if literature’.' Professor Genevieve Liveley, University of Bristol , UK 'Everyone ought to know something about Plato and Aristotle. Robert Eaglestone explains why this is especially so for students of literature and carefully guides them through the key ideas of these two giants of Greek philosophy. Accessible, engaging, and highly recommended.' Dr John Sellars, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK 'Robert Eaglestone doesn't just advocate a literary approach to Plato and Aristotle, his own book enacts a literary philosophy. His writing brims with meaningful metaphors and scenes captured from everyday life and elevated to profound conceptual contemplation....His own gift is to urge us to study literature with Plato and Aristotle and to put us back in touch with literature's truth and its wonder.' Professor Miriam Leonard, UCL, UK 'Robert Eagletone's wide-ranging and compellingly written book introduces Plato and Aristotle to the literary reader, showing not only how poets have drawn on ancient philosophy in the centuries since but also how the philosophers themselves can be open to a literary critical analysis. In other words, they can be read against the grain... These kinds of questions and conversations are provoked by the open-ended, intellectually generous nature of Truth and Wonder and I'm sure it will stimulate many interesting discussions to come.' Professor Jennifer Wallace, Cambridge University, UK 'The book beautifully illustrates the importance of thinking hard about what Plato and Aristotle have to say about literature while also thinking hard about how they say it - by reading their works 'as if literature'.' Professor Genevieve Liveley, University of Bristol , UK 'Everyone ought to know something about Plato and Aristotle. Robert Eaglestone explains why this is especially so for students of literature and carefully guides them through the key ideas of these two giants of Greek philosophy. Accessible, engaging, and highly recommended.' Dr John Sellars, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK Author InformationRobert Eaglestone is Professor of Contemporary Literature and Thought at Royal Holloway, UK, and has published widely on contemporary literature and literary theory, contemporary European philosophy and Holocaust and Genocide studies. He is the author of Doing English (fourth edition, 2017), editor of Brexit and Literature (2018) and co-editor, with Daniel O’Gorman, of The Routledge Companion to Twenty-First Century Literary Fiction (2018). Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |