George Grant and the Subversion of Modernity: Art, Philosophy, Religion, Politics and Education

Voorkant
Arthur Davis
University of Toronto Press, 15 dec 1996

George Grant's mystique as a public philosopher is due in part to the seemingly contradictory political stances he took through the years. His opposition to the Vietnam war and his linking of liberalism with technological progress and imperialism brought him favour among the political left during the 1960s. Then, in the following decade, his opposition to abortion earned him allies on the political right, despite his rejection of limitless capitalist growth and free trade with the US. This collection of original essays reveals the complex philosophic, artistic, and religious sources underlying Grant's public positions of nationalism, pacifism, and conservatism.

The collection begins with Grant's previously unpublished writing on Céline. This is a bold and vigorous Grant, writing on a topic about which he is passionate and deeply informed. Grant's own work is followed by two pieces that explore his devotion to Céline, Nietzsche, Heidegger, Weil, and Strauss also receive special attention here. Many of the essays draw on manuscripts and notes left unpublished by Grant, thus contributing new perspectives to the ongoing discussion of his work.

The focus of this book is the unknown George Grant, namely, the philosophic, religious, and artistic inspiration behind his well-known public positions. Here we discover the great modern thinkers who animated Grant, and whose writings occupied him for much of his life.

 

Inhoudsopgave

Why Read George Grant?
3
Célines Trilogy
11
Why Did George Grant Love Céline?
54
Thoughts on the Relationship
77
George Grant Nietzsche and the Problem of
109
George Grants Encounter
139
George Grant and Leo Strauss
169
The Unravelling of Liberalism
201
George Grant and the Theology of the Cross
243
George Grant on Simone Weil as Saint and Thinker
263
Selected Letters on Universities and Education
304
Index
329
Copyright

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Over de auteur (1996)

Arthur Davis is an associate professor in the School of Social Sciences at York University.

Bibliografische gegevens