Cultural Conservatism, Political Liberalism  

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"Jean Genet, for example, was a culture hero for both Sontag and Jean-Paul Sartre, even though, or because, he gloried in "crime, sexual and social degradation, above all murder" ("Sartre's Saint Genet") [...] If Sontag could admire Jean Genet, Matthew Arnold had held up François Villon, that "voice from the slums of Paris," with his "life of riot and crime, "over Geoffrey Chaucer. The real difference between the older humanism and Sontag's new ..."--Cultural Conservatism, Political Liberalism (1996) by James Seaton

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Cultural Conservatism, Political Liberalism (1996) is a book by James Seaton.

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