Goldwin Smith (1823-1910) was a celebrated, transatlantic writer on
current events, politics, religion, history, and literature. While he
made his academic mark teaching at Oxford, Cornell, and later as a
resident guru at Toronto, his facile pen earned him a far greater
reputation with general readers throughout the English-speaking world.
Determined to rouse concern over issues that he deemed to be important
to the advancement of humanity, Smith was deemed the controversialist
by the Dictionary of National Biography. A study of his life and his
writings provides new insight into liberalism, anti-semitism, the role
of the journalist, and other aspects of life in late 19th century
North America and Britain.
As a public intellectual, Goldwin Smith spoke out on a variety of
issues, frequently provoking intense debate. Phillips argues that the
core of Smith's thought and the driving force behind his role as a
controversialist lay in his moral philosophy, which provided a sense
of direction to Smith's many and sometimes disparate writings and
activities. This study will also probe the serious dilemma posed by
Smith's path to agnosticism in the last decades of his life. By moving
to a position of virtual unbelief, Smith risked damage not only to his
carefully-crafted public persona, but also to a life's work as an
impassioned moralist.
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An Intellectual Life of Goldwin Smith
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780313010934
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Bloomsbury USA
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter