Existentialists and Mystics: Writings on Philosophy and Literature

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Allen Lane, 1998 - Literary Collections - 546 pages
Best known for her novels and longer philosophical works, Iris Murdoch is also a brilliant essayist and critic. "Existentialists and Mystics" gathers for the first time in one volume the most influential and inspiring of her essays and shorter pieces. The selection, by Professor Peter Conradi, starts with an illuminating interview of Dame Iris Murdoch by Bryan Magee, and is organized to illustrate her training and development as a thinker, her rejection of the sterility of Anglo-American and Sartrean philosophers alike, and her journey toward Platonism and a practical mysticism. She negotiates her ideological opponents with elegance and scruple, and draws on a novelist's insight into art and literature to throw new light on philosophy.

Included are Murdoch's influential critiques of existentialism, written in the '50s, and her two Platonic dialogues on art and religion; incisive evaluations of T.S. Eliot, Gabriel Marcel, Sartre, Elias Canetti, Simone de Beauvoir, Simone Weil, and Camus; and key texts on the continuing importance of the sublime, the concept of love, and literature's role in curing the ills of philosophy.

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Contents

NOSTALGIA FOR THE PARTICULAR 195157
31
ENCOUNTERING EXISTENTIALISM 195059
99
THE NEED FOR THEORY 195666
155
Copyright

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About the author (1998)

Iris Murdoch was one of the twentieth century's most prominent novelists, winner of the Booker Prize for The Sea. She died in 1999.

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