
"Murdoch has the gift of dramatization, the ability to make the act of thought figurative."
George Steiner
This volume gathers the main essays that Iris Murdoch dedicated to the two disciplines between which her work tilts: philosophy and literature. Taking Kant as the main interlocutor, the author is concerned above all - as a good heir to a Romanticism sifted by the great modernist writers - of the interrelationships between aesthetic categories such as the good and the sublime or beauty and art.
At the same time, their extraordinary ability to formalize thought crystallizes in a reading guide by authors as fundamental as they are apparently contradictory: Shakespeare, Tolstoy, Eliot or Dostoevsky ... Existentialists and mystics who know, under his gaze, a synthesis that makes them closer, recognizing in them, and throughout the history of western art, a continuo...read more






