Having one’s Kant and eating it 
Terry Eagleton
- Northrop Frye’s Late Notebooks 1982-90: Volume One edited by Robert Denham
- Northrop Frye’s Late Notebooks 1982-90: Volume Two edited by Robert Denham
If someone were to ask why art and culture have proved so vital to the modern age, one might do worse than reply: to compensate for the decline of religion. It is certainly a more convincing response than claiming that modern society finds art particularly valuable, as opposed to richly profitable. What modernity finds precious is less works of art, which are just one more commodity in its marketplace, than the idea of the aesthetic. And this reverence for the aesthetic reflects the way in which art, or at least a certain exalted notion of it, is forced in the modern age to stand in for a religious transcendence which has fallen on hard times.
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Terry Eagleton is John Edward Taylor Professor of English Literature at Manchester. His books include Literary Theory, After Theory and, most recently, The Meaning of Life.
Other articles by this contributor:
Unhoused · anonymity
Lunging, Flailing, Mispunching · Terry Eagleton lambasts Richard Dawkins
Nudge-Winking · T.S. Eliot’s Politics
Reach-Me-Down Romantic · For and Against Orwell
In the Gaudy Supermarket · Gayatri Spivak
Coruscating on Thin Ice · The Divine Spark
Mothering · The Blackwater Lightship by Colm Tóibín
Newsreel History · Modern Times, Modern Places by Peter Conrad