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Terry Eagleton The Rise Of English Pdf Apr 2026

The 19th century saw Chartism, working-class radicalism, and fears of revolution (echoing the French Revolution). The ruling classes worried about social fragmentation. Eagleton quotes Matthew Arnold, who saw literature as a means to “civilize” the middle class and pacify the working class—spreading “sweetness and light” instead of class conflict.

Eagleton concludes that “English” is not a timeless truth but a historical invention. Its rise was part of the state’s management of class struggle. Today, literary theory (structuralism, Marxism, feminism, post-structuralism) threatens to expose this ideological work—which is why conservative critics resist it so fiercely. If you need the original PDF for academic study (e.g., for a course), please check your university library’s eBook collection, JSTOR, or an institutional login via Oxford Academic. For personal use, you may purchase Terry Eagleton, Literary Theory: An Introduction (any edition, University of Minnesota Press or Blackwell). Avoid unauthorized PDFs—they violate copyright and often contain missing pages or errors. Terry eagleton the rise of english pdf

English entered universities late (Oxford’s honors school in 1894, Cambridge in 1917) after fierce resistance from classicists. Its proponents (e.g., John Churton Collins, George Gordon) argued that English could produce gentlemen, not scholars—character formation over research. Eventually, I.A. Richards, F.R. Leavis, and William Empson gave it a rigorous, “practical criticism” method, but Eagleton notes that this technical formalism actually obscured its ideological function. The 19th century saw Chartism, working-class radicalism, and

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Terry eagleton the rise of english pdf

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