A scholarly book about T. S. Eliot's influential literary criticism (with an awesome reading of Heart of Darkness as commentary on the modern artist and phases of capitalism in here as well). Menand is an ironic, articulate critic and tackles the criticism of another eloquent ironist in this book about the ways that T.S. Eliot streamlined the contentions of his contemporaries, reformulated those of his predecessors (while claiming to disagree with them), and channeled the skeptical spirit of a doubting age in his opportunistic and fiercely influential critical work. Menand's phrases are sharp, rewarding, and rhetorically delicious. My personal favorite:
"wordiness is a way of muting the force of individual words in the hope that the whole will be more compatible with the modesty of our intentions."
Menand has an ability to parse out ideas and stare pretty phrasing levelly in the eye and make it blush. This review makes it sound like Menand is criticizing Eliot, but he actually trains our attention on what Eliot did so spectacularly, which was not introduce new ideas but instead paint himself as an outside observer, a wit with no country, who could verbalize the modernist project both as a salubrious recovery of tradition and departure from its immediate past. (though Menand points out that the nineteenth century value of "sincerity" gets reimagined in the "impersonal" appeal of the individual artist to emotion and tradition) Menand does an amazing job pointing out when Eliot's rhetoric actually makes little practical or metaphysical sense, when it sounds better than it means. He connects Eliot's valorization of literary formalism with the professionalization aligned with late capitalism, and Menand points out the challenges presented by imagining what literature does and what relationship it has to the word of objects and the mind of the author. In short, for students of modernism and the modern period, this is a very helpful, very engaging book.