T. S. Eliot and the Use of MemoryBucknell University Press, 1996 - 186 "This book explores poetry of T. S. Eliot and three plays, Sweeney Agonistes, The Family Reunion, and The Cocktail Party, in the light of his responses to his cultural tradition." "The concept of memory, as an acknowledgment both of a cultural heritage and of its availability for original works of mind and imagination, unifies this study by Grover Smith. Eliot was tradition-oriented, drawing upon various cultures - primitive, Indic, European, and American - for poetic inspiration and models. By education, he was multicultural in a thoroughly legitimate sense." "In separate chapters, Smith, though commenting on a few verbal sources of types familiar from Eliot's practice of stylistic borrowing, focuses on thematic concerns. Included are the psychological labyrinth of death-in-life of Poe's tales and poems; transfigurations of Hamlet from Shakespeare to Goethe, Coleridge, and Freud; popular stage entertainment in nineteenth-century America; poetic stimuli from James Barrie, Arnold Bennett, and Aldous Huxley; twentieth-century speculations on time and serialism; the world of occult phenomena in W. B. Yeats and, later, the novelist Charles Williams; and Eliot's obsessive critiques of primitive myth and ritual." "In various ways, all of these interests intersected. Smith shows in Eliot's dedication to diverse traditions a practical imperative, and to a great extent a moral one, for a poetic art grounded in traditional American reverence for inherited values."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved |
Spis treści
Preface | 9 |
Democratic Tradition and Eliots Transforming Talent | 17 |
The Ghost of Poe | 37 |
Prawa autorskie | |
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aesthetic Alcestis Aldous Huxley allusion American Babbitt bones Burnt Norton Celia chapter character Christian cited classicism Cocktail Party conscious couplet critical Crome Yellow cultural Dante dead death draft dramatic early East Coker echo Eliot's poetry emotional essay Euripides F. H. Bradley Faber faery Family Reunion Four Quartets Fresca Gerontion ghost ghostly Grover Smith Hamlet Harry Henry human Ibid imagery Individual Talent J. W. Dunne John Layard lady Laforgue later Lavinia Layard Letters lines literary literature Little Gidding living London Maurras memory mind minstrel modern moral motif myth mythic occult Oxford passage past Persephone philosophical play Poe's poem poet poet's poetic Pound present primitive Prufrock psychological rattle religious Review ritual role romantic Schuchard sense Sesostris Shakespeare shaman shamanistic significance social soul spiritual Sweeney T. S. Eliot tion tradition transformation underworld unified sensibility University Press W. B. Yeats Waste Land William Yeats's York