Abstract

T. S. Eliot was the founder and editor of the Criterion, a literary and cultural review with a European focus that was published during the interwar period. The Criterion functioned as a platform for intellectuals with a shared perception of European culture and European identity. It was part of a network of European periodicals that facilitated an intellectual exchange between writers and thinkers with a common orientation. Examples of other reviews in the Criterion network were the Nouvelle Revue Française from France, La Fiera Letteraria and Il Convegno from Italy, the Revista de Occidente from Spain (edited by José Ortega y Gasset), and Die Neue Rundschau, the Europäische Revue, and the Neue deutsche Beiträge (edited by Hugo von Hofmannsthal) from Germany. In this article, I investigate the specific role the Criterion network of reviews and intellectuals played as an infrastructure for the dissemination of ideas about European culture during the interwar period. I also discuss the content of these ideas about the ‘European mind’. As to the latter, I suggest that Eliot positioned himself as well as his magazine in the European tradition of humanist thinking. Unfortunately, the Criterion’s ambition for a reconstruction of the European mind would dissipate as the European orientation of the 1920s was displaced by the political events of the 1930s. Eliot and his Criterion network expressed a Europeanism that has often been overlooked in recent research. The ideas discussed in this network remain interesting in our time, in which discussions about European values and European identity are topical. What is also highly interesting is the role cultural reviews played during the interwar period as a medium for exchanging such ideas.

Highlights

  • In this article, I investigate the specific role the Criterion network of reviews and intellectuals played as an infrastructure for the dissemination of ideas about European culture during the interwar period

  • The Criterion was one of a network of several cultural periodicals which shared an interest in a common European culture. These reviews, and the authors who wrote for and edited them, can be seen to constitute a European ‘Republic of Letters’. In his lecture ‘The Unity of European Culture’, Eliot claimed that the network of writers and thinkers involved in the Criterion formed ‘an international fraternity of men of letters’ who cooperated in a shared European spirit

  • As argued in this article, Eliot believed in the unity of European culture, a unity that in his view was based on its classical and Christian roots

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Summary

Jeroen Vanheste

To cite this article: Jeroen Vanheste, ‘The Reconstruction of the European Mind: T. S. Eliot’s Criterion and the Idea of Europe’, Journal of European Periodical Studies, 3.2 (Winter 2018), 23–37

The Reconstruction of the European Mind
The Criterion
The International Network of the Criterion
The Classicist Idea of Europe
Classicism as a Form of Humanism
Conclusion

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