Author Video: Terry Eagleton discusses the philosophy of literature, fiction and indeterminacy


In The Event of Literature Terry Eagleton returns to the discipline to which he has devoted his career: literary theory. Here, in the final part of our interview with the literary critic and Marxist, Eagleton discusses the value of literary theory, fiction, the philosophy of literature and indeterminacy. 

Visit Yale’s London YouTube channel to view all four videos in this series.

More about Terry Eagleton’s The Event of Literature

In his characteristically concise, witty, and lucid new book The Event of Literature, Terry Eagleton turns his attention to the questions we should ask about literature, but rarely do. What is literature? Can we even speak of “literature” at all? What do different literary theories tell us about what texts mean and do?

In throwing new light on these and other questions he has raised in previous best-sellers (including On EvilWhy Marx was Right and Reason, Faith and Revolution), Eagleton offers a new theory of what we mean by literature. He also shows what it is that a great many different literary theories have in common.

Event-of-literature

The Event of Literature is a highly unusual combination of critical theory and analytic philosophy, in which Eagleton sees all literary work, from novels to poems, as a strategy to contain a reality that seeks to thwart that containment, and in doing so throws up new problems that the work tries to resolve. The “event” of literature, Eagleton argues, consists in this continual transformative encounter, unique and endlessly repeatable.

Freewheeling through centuries of critical ideas, Eagleton’s The Event of Literature sheds light on the place of literature in our culture, and in doing so reaffirms the value and validity of literary thought today.

The Event of Literature is available to buy now from Yale University Press.


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  1. [...] college students who have overlooked literary theory in their education, as Eagleton laments in an interview with Yale University Press.  In a generation reliant on Google and Wikipedia to determine truth [...]



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