Introduction

Philosophy and Literature 40 (1):124-126 (2016)
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Abstract

Leavis would not have approved of the third epithet in our title. He saw himself as an “anti-philosopher”—philosophers being thinkers who reduce thought to “isms.” Leavis was clear that he was neither a theorist nor a philosopher, but as a literary critic he could not avoid thinking about the kind of existence works of literature have, and how they can be forms of thought. In “Leavisian Thinking,” Ian Robinson shows how this led him to develop the idea of the “third realm,” which is often misinterpreted but can be useful to both the philosophy of language as well as literary criticism.Chris Joyce’s essay, “Rethinking Leavis,” seeks to establish the case for reading Leavis as a thinker and as one of the most...

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Danièle Moyal-Sharrock
University of Hertfordshire

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