Benjamin Lockerd “Eliot’s reputation as a critic of society has been worse than his record”—so wrote Roger Kojecký at the beginning of his 1971 book, T. S. Eliot’s Social Criticism.1 Thirty-five years later, the situation has not changed, for T. S. Eliot’s cultural criticism continues to be more maligned than studied. It is not uncommon to hear Eliot accused of having “flirted with fascism” and of having proposed the...
Read MoreSections
Join Our Mailing List
Twitter Feed
- Fogged Clarity: Blog - RPM Challenge 2012 http://t.co/Q0Fj4guQ • 2 days ago
- Fogged Clarity: Featured Articles - Andrew Hudgins http://t.co/70Qu1n9B • 3 days ago
- Fogged Clarity: Featured Album - Bones For Tinder http://t.co/ZSq3lo9n • 3 days ago
- Fogged Clarity: Reviews - Review: Neil Shepard's "(T)ravel Un(T)ravel" http://t.co/TC3FEGPv • 3 days ago




Find Us Elsewhere