released 7/5/2019
According to poet and professor James Matthew Wilson, T. S. Eliot’s career as a cultural critic “would be to trace down in thought our disorders until he reached their foundation in ‘a wrong attitude towards God.’” Unlike his predecessor Matthew Arnold, Eliot did not believe that literature and the arts could replace religion as an orienting social force. Wilson’s essay, “T. S. Eliot: Culture and Anarchy,” examines Eliot’s thoughts about the public significance of religion. That essay is now available as a Mars Hill Audio Reprint.
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