Terry Eagleton is Distinguished Professor of English Literature, University of Lancaster, Professor of Cultural Theory at the National University of Ireland, and Distinguished Visiting Professor of English Literature at the University of Notre Dame. He is the author of more than 40 books, spanning the fields of literary theory, postmodernism, politics, ideology, and religion, including the seminal Literary Theory: An Introduction. His last six books were published by Yale: Culture and the Death of God, How to Read Literature, The Event of Literature, Why Marx Was Right, On Evil and Reason, Faith and Revolution.
'In our predicament every direct optimism is by definition a fake:
the only bearers of true hope are those who dare to confront the
abyss we are approaching. Hope without Optimism is the best formula
of the authentic religion that fits our dark times.’ - Slavoj
Žižek, author of Living in the End Times
‘With its wide sweep and fluent engagement with novels, social
theory, lyric poetry, philosophy, literary theory, history, drama,
theology and more, this book is brimming with ideas. The
overwhelming coherence and power of Eagleton’s vision and the
superabundance of novel insights is impressive.’ - Raymond Geuss,
author of A World Without Why
'For years now, Eagleton’s work has been ‘must-read’ across the
board. There are theological tomes on hope but nothing that cuts so
cleanly and incisively across the disciplines of literary theory,
Marxist theory, politics, and theology as does this work. The final
chapter is not only a brilliant piece of theology; it is also a
very moving essay on what we have to hope for: if not much, still,
not nothing. And the difference between something and nothing is
the only difference that finally matters. Eagleton shows why that
is so.’ - Denys Turner, author of Faith, Reason, and the Existence
of God
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