The Humanist Critic: Lionel Trilling and Edward Said
By (Author) Daniel Rosenberg Nutters
Anthem Press
Anthem Press
13th January 2026
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary theory
Literary studies: general
Hardback
250
Width 153mm, Height 229mm, Spine 26mm
454g
The Humanist Critic examines the careers of Lionel Trilling and Edward Said in two contexts: on one hand, it focuses on the changing shape of literary criticism as it occurred alongside the advent of critical theory and, on the other hand, it addresses each critic's understanding of the gradual emergence of modernism in the nineteenth-century. Nutters argues that Trilling and Said each drew upon their favorite modern writers to reimagine the role of the humanist tradition at a time when the academic study of literature began to lose faith in humanism and fragment. The Humanist Critic thus studies the influence of Matthew Arnold and Thomas Mann on Trilling and the influence of Joseph Conrad and Gerard Manley Hopkins on Said while putting the careers of Trilling and Said in dialogue with structuralist and deconstructive thought. The Humanist Critic is ultimately a focused genealogy of literary studies; a study of influence; a critique of current trends in critical culture; and a renewed justification for the humanist vocation.
Daniel Rosenberg Nutters teaches English at Cheyney University of Pennsylvania.