Double Agent

The Critic and Society

Morris Dickstein author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press Inc

Published:5th Sep '96

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Double Agent cover

Double Agent is a watershed in the recent revival of interest in the role of the public critic and intellectual who writes about culture, politics, and the arts for an intelligent general audience. Offering acute portraits of critics both famous and neglected, Dickstein traces the evolution of cultural criticism over the last century from Matthew Arnold to New Historicism. He examines the development of practical criticism, the rise and fall of literary journalism, and the growth of American Studies, and rereads the work of critics like Arnold, Walter Pater, I.A. Richards, Roland Barthes, Edmund Wilson, R.P. Blackmur, Lionel Trilling, Alfred Kazin, and George Orwell. In essays and books that are themselves works of literature, these writers made criticism central to the public sphere, balancing social and literary values, politic commitment and aesthetic judgment. Though marginalized or ignored by academic histories of criticism, their example has proved immensely valuable for younger critics eager to find a personal voice and reach a wider public. Dickstein concludes with a lively and provocative dialogue that weighs the claims of recent literary theory and the importance of renewing public culture.

"[This book is] a sort of love letter to the critics closest to Dickstein's heart. It's a thoughtful book, and finally--unexpectedly--a moving one....The qualities he prizes in his gallery of critics--their respect for intellectual complexities, their energetic prose, their faith in the power of art to illuminate and transform our lives--are all present in his own work. His book deserves a place alongside those of the masters it commemorates."-- Chicago Tribune
"Dickstein traces the evolution of an Anglo-American tradition of cultural criticism from Matthew Arnold through Lionel Trilling and the postwar New York intellectuals to its present state of decline in 'the professionalization of criticism' and 'its renunciation of a public language and a wider audience.'"--The Nation
"An exhilarating exploration of what makes the best critical minds tick."--The New York Times

ISBN: 9780195111378

Dimensions: 146mm x 230mm x 19mm

Weight: 349g

244 pages