About This Book
A collection of essays considers how books shape and reflect human culture, arguing that great literature preserves racial and personal experience while renewing readers' imagination. Topics range from method, time and place, and the educational value of personality, to the liberating power of ideas, the unconscious element, and the role of tragedy and fiction in moral development. The author treats creative activity as both individual rapture and social inheritance, examines how readers enter texts, and discusses liberation from temporal and local limitations through imaginative sympathy, concluding with reflections on idealism, the vision of perfection, and the obligations of cultured life.
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