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Eliseo Vivas (July 13, 1901 - 1993) was a 20th-century philosopher and literary theorist. As a child, his family fled Colombia in response to Cipriano Castro. They went to Curacao, then Paris, then, in 1915, to New York.〔 Vivas served as the Venezuelan consul in Philadelphia, then turned to academia studying or teaching at, among other schools, the University of Wisconsin, the University of Chicago, Ohio State University, Northwestern University, Rockford College, and the University of Iowa.〔 Vivas's philosophy was essentially conservative, and he relied on poetry as metaphysics while abandoning naturalism.〔Curtler, Hugh Mercer. "(Vivas, Eliseo )" Date: 31 August 201. Accessed 20 October 2015.〕 He arrived at his conclusions after trying on many schools, "from Marxism to conservatism, and from naturalism to value realism."〔Curtler, Hugh M. "(Eliseo Vivas, 1950 )." ''Modern Age''. Summer/Fall l982. Accessed 20 October 2015.〕 His papers are collected by Northwestern University.〔(Guide to the Eliseo Vivas (1901-1993) Papers )〕 ==Books== * 1950 ''The Moral and the Ethical Life'' * 1955 ''Creation and Discovery'' * 1960 ''D. H. Lawrence, the Failure and the Triumph of Art'' * 1963 ''The Artistic Transaction and Essays on Theory of Literature'' * 1971 ''Contra Marcuse'' * 1979 ''Two Roads to Ignorance'' 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「Eliseo Vivas」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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