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Terry Eagleton

literary critic, non-fiction writer, university teacher, literary historian, literary theorist, writer, literary scholar, man of letters

1943

Terence Francis Eagleton is an English literary theorist, critic, and public intellectual. He is currently Distinguished Professor of English Literature at Lancaster University.

All Quotes by Terry Eagleton

“Most poetry in the modern age has retreated to the private sphere, turning its back on the political realm.”
— Terry Eagleton
“After all, if you do not resist the apparently inevitable, you will never know how inevitable the inevitable was.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Deconstruction... insists not that truth is illusory but that it is institutional.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Postmodernism is among other things a sick joke at the expense of... revolutionary avant-gardism.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Literature transforms and intensifies ordinary language, deviates systematically from everyday speech. If you approach me at a bus stop and murmur "Thou still unravished bride of quietness," then I am instantly aware that I am in the presence of the literary.”
— Terry Eagleton
“If the masses are not thrown a few novels, they may react by throwing up a few barricades.”
— Terry Eagleton
“All consciousness is consciousness of something: in thinking I am aware that my thought is 'pointing towards' some object.”
— Terry Eagleton
“The present is only understandable through the past, with which it forms a living continuity; and the past is always grasped from our own partial viewpoint within the present.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Literary texts do not exist on bookshelves: they are processes of signification materialized only in the practice of reading. For literature to happen, the reader is quite as vital as the author.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Reading is not a straightforward linear movement, a merely cumulative affair: our initial speculations generate a frame of reference within which to interpret what comes next, but what comes next may retrospectively transform our original understanding, highlighting some features of it and backgrounding others.”
— Terry Eagleton
“What was needed was a literary theory which, while preserving the formalist bent of New Criticism, its dogged attention to literature as aesthetic object rather than social practice, would make something a good deal more systematic and 'scientific' out of all this. The answer arrived in 1957, in the shape of the Canadian Northrop Fryes mighty 'totalization' of all literary genres, Anatomy of Criticism.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Reading a text is more like tracing this process of constant flickering than it is like counting the beads on a necklace.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Writing seems to rob me of my being: it is a second hand mode of communication, a pallid, mechanical transcript of speech, and so always at one remove from my consciousness.”
— Terry Eagleton
“It is difficult to think of an origin without wanting to go back beyond it.”
— Terry Eagleton
“It is language which speaks in literature, in all its swarming 'polysemic' plurality, not the author himself.”
— Terry Eagleton
“If we were not called upon to work in order to survive, we might simply lie around all day doing nothing.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Schizophrenic language has in this sense an interesting resemblance to poetry.”
— Terry Eagleton
“All desire springs from a lack, which it strives continually to fill.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Language always pre-exists us: it is always already 'in place', waiting to assign us our places within it.”
— Terry Eagleton
“We live in a society which on the one hand pressurizes us into the pursuit of instant gratification, and the other hand imposes on whole sectors of the population and endless deferment of fulfillment.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Any attempt to define literary theory in terms of a distinctive method is doomed to failure.”
— Terry Eagleton
“The truth is that liberal humanism is at once largely ineffectual, and the best ideology of the 'human' that present bourgeois society can muster.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Understanding is always in some sense retrospective, which is what Hegel meant by remarking that the owl of Minerva flies only at night.”
— Terry Eagleton
“If history moves forward, knowledge of it travels backwards, so that in writing of our own recent past we are continually meeting ourselves coming the other way.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Chaucer was a class traitorSidney was a nob.”
— Terry Eagleton
“All propaganda or popularization involves a putting of the complex into the simple, but such a move is instantly deconstructive. For if the complex can be put into the simple, then it cannot be as complex as it seemed in the first place; and if the simple can be an adequate medium of such complexity, then it cannot after all be as simple as all that.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Readers are less and less seen as mere non-writers, the subhuman “other” or flawed derivative of the author; the lack of a pen is no longer a shameful mark of secondary status but a positively enabling space, just as within every writer can be seen to lurk, as a repressed but contaminating antithesis, a reader.”
— Terry Eagleton
“It is silly to call fat people “gravitationally challenged”, a self-righteous fetishism of language which is no more than a symptom of political frustration.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Post-structuralism is among other things a kind of theoretical hangover from the failed uprising of ‘68, a way of keeping the revolution warm at the level of language, blending the euphoric libertarianism of that moment with the stoical melancholia of its aftermath.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Ideology is present to such an extent in all the agents' activities that it becomes indistinguishable from their lived experience.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Ideology ... is therefore necessarily false; its social function is not to give agents a true knowledge of the social structure but simply to insert them as it were into their practical activities.”
— Terry Eagleton
“At the level of experience the social whole remains opaque to the agents.”
— Terry Eagleton
“As opposed to science ideology has the precise function of hiding the real contradictions and of reconstituting on an imaginary level a relatively coherent discourse which serves as the horizon of agents' experience.”
— Terry Eagleton
“What persuades men and women to mistake each other from time to time for gods or vermin is ideology. One can understand well enough how human beings may struggle and murder for good material reasons—reasons connected, for instance, with their physical survival. It is much harder to grasp how they may come to do so in the name of something as apparently abstract as ideas. Yet ideas are what men and women live by, and will occasionally die for.”
— Terry Eagleton
“It is important to see that, in the critique of ideology, only those interventions will work which make sense to the mystified subject itself.”
— Terry Eagleton
“I do not know whether to be delighted or outraged by the fact that Literary Theory: An Introduction was the subject of a study by a well known U.S. business school, which was intrigued to discover how an academic text could become a best-seller.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Cynicism and naivety lie cheek by jowl in the American imagination; if the United States is one of the most venal nations on Earth, it is also one of the most earnestly idealistic.”
— Terry Eagleton
“What perished in the Soviet Union was Marxist only in the sense that the Inquisition was Christian”
— Terry Eagleton
“"In some traditionalist universities not long ago, you could not research on authors who were still alive. This was a great incentive to slip a knife between their ribs one foggy evening, or a remarkable test of patience if your chosen novelist was in rude health and only 34".”
— Terry Eagleton
“In conscious life, we achieve some sense of ourselves as reasonably unified, coherent selves, and without this action would be impossible. But all this is merely at the ‘imaginary’ level of the ego, which is no more than the tip of the iceberg of the human subject known to psychoanalysis. The ego is function or effect of a subject which is always dispersed, never identical with itself, strung out along the chains of the discourses which constitute it.”
— Terry Eagleton
“You can tell that the capitalist system is in trouble when people start talking about capitalism.”
— Terry Eagleton
“After all, if you do not resist the apparently inevitable, you will never know how inevitable the inevitable was.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Modern capitalist nations are the fruit of a history of slavery, genocide, violence and exploitation every bit as abhorrent as Mao's China or Stalin's Soviet Union.”
— Terry Eagleton
“History works itself out by an inevitable internal logic.”
— Terry Eagleton
“It is capitalism, not Marxism, that trades in futures.”
— Terry Eagleton
“The truth is that the past exists no more than the future, even though it feels as though it does.”
— Terry Eagleton
“There seems to be something in humanity which will not bow meekly to the insolence of power.”
— Terry Eagleton
“The most compelling confirmation of Marx's theory of history is late capitalist society. There is a sense in which this case is becoming truer as time passes.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Ivory towers are as rare as bowling alleys in tribal cultures.”
— Terry Eagleton
“When it comes to who exactly should be exploited, the system is admirably egalitarian.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Capitalism cannot survive without a working class, while the working class can flourish a lot more freely without capitalism.”
— Terry Eagleton
“The liberal state is neutral between capitalism and its critics until the critics look like they are winning.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Socialism is the completion of democracy, not the negation of it.”
— Terry Eagleton
“Capitalism is the sorcerer's apprentice: it has summoned up powers which have spun wildly out of control and now threaten to destroy us. The task of socialism is not to spur on those powers but to bring them under rational human control.”
— Terry Eagleton