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Robert B. Heilman and Eric Voegelin : A Friendship in Letters, 1944-1984

Part of the Eric Voegelin Institute Series in Political Philosophy series
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This collection of letters exchanged between Robert B.

Heilman and Eric Voegelin records a friendship that lasted more than forty years.

These scholars, both giants in their own fields, shared news of family and events, academic gossip, personal and professional vicissitudes, academic successes, and, most important, ideas.

Heilman and Voegelin first became acquainted around 1942, when Voegelin delivered a guest lecture for the political science department at Louisiana State University.

At that time, Heilman was teaching in the English department at LSU along with Robert Penn Warren and Cleanth Brooks.

What started as simple exchanges soon grew into full-fledged correspondence - beginning with an eight-page letter by Voegelin commenting on Heilman's manuscript on Shakespeare's King Lear.

Their correspondence lasted until four months before Voegelin's death in 1985.

These letters represent Voegelin's most prolonged correspondence conducted in English with an American and provide readers with an insight into Voegelin as a literary critic.

While Voegelin's analysis of Henry James's The Turn of the Screw is well known, these letters reveal the source and genesis of the essay.

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£59.00
Product Details
University of Missouri Press
0826215076 / 9780826215079
Hardback
193
31/03/2004
United States
360 pages, index
714 grams