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Sartor Resartus Critical Essay | Critical Essay by Roderick Watson

This literature criticism consists of approximately 24 pages of analysis & critique of Sartor Resartus.
This section contains 7,055 words
(approx. 24 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Thomas Carlyle - Critical Essay by Roderick Watson

Critical Essay by Roderick Watson

SOURCE: "Carlyle: The World as Text and the Text as Voice," in The History of Scottish Literature, Volume 3, edited by Douglas Gifford, Aberdeen University Press, 1988, pp. 153-68.

In the following essay, Watson examines the events in Carlyle's life which led him to the philosophy presented in Sartor Resartus. Watson then studies that philosophy as Carlyle reveals it through the course of Sartor, noting that Carlyle's vision is a religious one, without the concept of a personal God, a vision in which it becomes essential to recognize the power of symbols and to be able to see through them.

Carlyle occupies a unique place in British cultural history. As a social historian, he was possessed by a vision of human fate which was essentially poetic. As a nineteenth-century intellectual, his impatient and iconoclastic mind created nothing less than an early version of modern semiotic study which claimed a role...
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This section contains 7,055 words
(approx. 24 pages at 300 words per page)
Purchase our Thomas Carlyle - Critical Essay by Roderick Watson
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Thomas Carlyle - Critical Essay by Roderick Watson from Literature Criticism Series. ©2005-2006 Thomson Gale, a part of the Thomson Corporation. All rights reserved.
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