David Bromwich: 5 books

Book cover of Moral Imagination
by David Bromwich
Language: English
Release Date: March 23, 2014

Spanning many historical and literary contexts, Moral Imagination brings together a dozen recent essays by one of America's premier cultural critics. David Bromwich explores the importance of imagination and sympathy to suggest how these faculties may illuminate the motives of human action and the...
Book cover of American Breakdown

American Breakdown

The Trump Years and How They Befell Us

by David Bromwich
Language: English
Release Date: June 25, 2019

How Trump got to the Oval Office—and how both parties and the mainstream media are keeping him there Donald Trump’s residency in the White House is not an accident of American history, and it can’t be blamed on a single cause. In American Breakdown, David Bromwich provides an essential...
Book cover of The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke
by David Bromwich
Language: English
Release Date: May 6, 2014

This biography of statesman Edmund Burke (1729-1797), covering three decades, is the first to attend to the complexity of Burke's thought as it emerges in both the major writings and private correspondence. David Bromwich reads Burke's career as an imperfect attempt to organize an honorable life in the dense medium he knew politics to be.
Book cover of Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature

Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature

Thirtieth-Anniversary Edition

by Richard Rorty, David Bromwich
Language: English
Release Date: December 29, 2008

When it first appeared in 1979, Philosophy and the Mirror of Nature hit the philosophical world like a bombshell. In it, Richard Rorty argued that, beginning in the seventeenth century, philosophers developed an unhealthy obsession with the notion of representation: comparing the mind to a mirror...
Book cover of How Words Make Things Happen
by David Bromwich
Language: English
Release Date: March 28, 2019

Sooner or later, our words take on meanings other than we intended. How Words Make Things Happen suggests that the conventional idea of persuasive rhetoric (which assumes a speaker's control of calculated effects) and the modern idea of literary autonomy (which assumes that 'poetry makes nothing happen')...
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