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Wellsprings (The Richard Ellmann Lectures in Modern Literature)

Wellsprings (The Richard Ellmann Lectures in Modern Literature)
Author: Mario Vargas Llosa
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Category: Book

List Price: $17.95
Buy New: $7.49
You Save: $10.46 (58%)



New (37) Used (8) from $7.49

Avg. Customer Rating: 5.0 out of 5 stars 1 reviews
Sales Rank: 738512

Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 208
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.4
Dimensions (in): 7.2 x 4.5 x 1

ISBN: 0674028368
Dewey Decimal Number: 860.9
EAN: 9780674028364
ASIN: 0674028368

Publication Date: May 31, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Shipping: Expedited shipping available
Shipping: International shipping available

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Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

When a master novelist, essayist, and critic searches for the wellsprings of his own work, where does he turn? Mario Vargas Llosa?Peruvian writer, presidential contender, and public intellectual?answers this most personal question with elegant concision in this collection of essays. In “Four Centuries of Don Quixote,” he revisits the quintessential Spanish novel?a fiction about fiction whose ebullient prose still questions the certainties of our stumbling ideals. In recounting his illicit, delicious discovery of Borges’ fiction?“the most important thing to happen to imaginative writing in the Spanish language in modern times”?Vargas Llosa stands in for a generation of Latin American novelists who were liberated from their sense of isolation and inferiority by this Argentinean master of the European tradition.

In a nuanced appreciation of Ortega y Gasset, Vargas Llosa recovers the democratic liberalism of a misunderstood radical?a mid-century political philosopher on a par with Sartre and Russell, ignored because “he was only a Spaniard.” And in essays on the influence of Karl Popper and Isaiah Berlin, the author finds an antidote to the poisonous well of fanaticism in its many modern forms, from socialist utopianism and nationalism to religious fundamentalism. From these essays a picture emerges of a writer for whom the enchantment of literature awakens a critical gaze on the turbulent world in which we live.

(20080225)



Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars an intellectual tip of the iceberg   July 22, 2008
I am a fan of many topics included in this book. A few years ago I tried to understand Hayek's 1944 hit, The Road to Serfdom, and I sympathize with the effort to stick to gradual progress as approved by Isaiah Berlin to avoid the forms of totalitarianism that dominated power politics in the twentieth century. The final chapter of Wellsprings explains the concepts that were key for Karl Popper in hoping for open societies and avoiding intellectual approaches like his book, The Poverty of Historicism. Revolutions become popular when everybody wants everything to be all different, and people in a superpower are unlikely to appreciate the desires of those who are considered the opposition. Karl Popper was born in Austria, and used words in ways that have not caught on, but Mario Vargas Llosa is an ideal wordsmith for putting the key concepts of open societies in a context that makes Karl Popper understandable.

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