For the hell of it 
Terry Eagleton
- In Praise of Meekness: Essays on Ethics and Politics by Norberto Bobbio, translated by Teresa Chataway
The political Left has always had trouble with ethics, in theory as well as in practice. The practical problems hardly need recounting. It was one of the great tragedies of the 20th century that socialism proved least possible where it was most necessary. A vision of human emancipation which presupposed for its success all the precious fruits of modernity – material wealth, liberal traditions, a flourishing civic society, an educated populace – became instead the guiding light by which wretchedly impoverished nations bereft of such benefits sought to throw off their chains. Shunned by those well-heeled nations who might have smoothed their path to freedom, they marched their people into modernity at gunpoint, with criminal consequences. One would not describe Fascism as tragic, whatever the tragic destruction to which it gave birth. But Stalinism was tragedy of a classical kind, as the noble intentions of socialism were deflected into their opposites in that fatal inversion which Aristotle calls peripeteia.
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Terry Eagleton’s books include Literary Theory, After Theory and – this month – Trouble with Strangers: A Study of Ethics.
Other articles by this contributor:
In the Gaudy Supermarket · Gayatri Spivak
Coruscating on Thin Ice · The Divine Spark
The Estate Agent · Terry Eagleton spears Stanley Fish
Newsreel History · Modern Times, Modern Places by Peter Conrad
Lunging, Flailing, Mispunching · Terry Eagleton lambasts Richard Dawkins
Unhoused · anonymity
Nudge-Winking · T.S. Eliot’s Politics
A Spot of Firm Government · Claude Rawson