'Thinking Against the Current': Literature and Political Resistance
                        
                     
                                            
                            
                                                                by Sybil Oldfield
                                                                
                                    2020-05-08 08:20:46
                                
                                
                             
                         
                                     
                
                    'Thinking Against the Current': Literature and Political Resistance
                                            
                                                            by Sybil Oldfield
                                                        
                                2020-05-08 08:20:46
                            
                            
                         
                                        
                                                                                                This collection of literary/historical essays, written 1970-2010, covers political subjects as diverse as 17th Century Quaker persecution history, the social impact of Malthus, the self-emancipation of English women, Eleanor Rathbone on the human rig...
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                                                This collection of literary/historical essays, written 1970-2010, covers political subjects as diverse as 17th Century Quaker persecution history, the social impact of Malthus, the self-emancipation of English women, Eleanor Rathbone on the human rights of girls and German women's resistance to Hitler. The more literary subjects include the social thinking of the English Romantics, Dickens' Great Expectations, Simone Weil's great essays attacking militarism and Virginia Woolf's opposition to the State  as well as contemporary American women poets on the problem of war. But despite all its diversity, this collection has one unifying theme  the necessity for resistance, for 'thinking against the current', as Virginia Woolf wrote in 'Thoughts on Peace in an Air-raid'. The torch of resistance to oppression and militarism is shown to have been continuously handed on through the generations from the seventeenth century to our own day by men and women who had the courage, at whatever personal cost, to 'fight with the mind'. This book of passionate, lively essays is not merely a treasure trove for biographical researchers; it is also strengthening medicine, introducing us to unfamiliar forebears who can help us in our current struggle for a better world. As Simone Weil said: We can find something better than ourselves in the past.
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