Search Books
Romantic Writing and the Em… Building Literacy Connectio…

The Knowing Most Worth Doing: Essays on Pluralism, Ethics, and Religion

Author Wayne C. Booth
Publisher University of Virginia Press
Category Language Arts & Disciplines
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
49.50 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸 🏷 Buy Used — $16.23

✓ Usually ships in 24 hours

Share:
Book Details
ISBN / ASIN081392992X
ISBN-139780813929927
AvailabilityUsually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank4,575,045
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Throughout the second half of the twentieth century until his death in 2005, Wayne Booth was one of the most influential literary critics in America and beyond, known worldwide for The Rhetoric of Fiction (1961), and hailed as a progressive advocate for rethinking the concept of liberal education in a changing world. His many books and essays remain classic reading for those who wish to understand how fiction communicates ethically, why good ethical criticism as such is a signature human activity to be cherished, and how the human desire to know helps to define who we are, collectively and individually.

In this final volume of Booth s selected essays, appropriately titled The Knowing Most Worth Doing, after Booth s earlier edited collection, The Knowledge Most Worth Having (1967), Walter Jost, in collaboration with the author, has gathered an indispensable collection of his former teacher s thinking across a wide variety of fields and disciplines, from ethics to religion and from rhetorical criticism to the philosophical plurality of possible critical modes. The selections begin with three diverse, profound discussions of the need for plural perspectives in the contemporary world, proceed to accessible yet learned readings of the ethics of literature, and end with wonderful speculations on the nature of, and human need for, religious thought. Gathered from various journals and books over several decades, these "fugitive" essays will prove their enduring value because they speak frankly and without pretensions to problems that continue to plague us, and to aspirations that continue to draw a new generation into the knowing most worth doing. In these discussions, knowledge is understood as an activity and a way of life, one that can be embraced by all people in many different ways.

Collins I Smirt, You Stooze, They Krump: Can You Still…
View
Is There a Cow in Moscow?: More Beastly Mispronunciati…
View
Lifescripts: What to Say to Get What You Want in 101 o…
View
Cassell's Colloquial Spanish: A Handbook of Idiomatic …
View
Reading Wonders Reading/Writing Workshop Grade 6 (ELEM…
View
Reading Wonders Literature Anthology Grade 6 (ELEMENTA…
View
Writing Through Literature
View
Composition in the Classical Tradition
View
Writing Good Sentences, Revised Edition (3rd Edition)
View