Title: T.S. Eliot (1888-1965)
1 T.S. Eliot (1888-1965)
2Tradition and the Individual Talent
- Impersonal theory of poetry
- - relation of the poem to other poems by other
authors consciousness of the past - - relation of the poem to its author
- emotions feelings
-
3Objective Correlative
- Poetry is
- - not a turning loose of emotion, but an
escape from emotion - - not the expression of personality, but an
escape from personality
4The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock
- Introduction
- The subject of Love Song
- The form of Love Song
5I. Introduction
- T.S. Eliot The Waste Land (1922)
- Modernism rejection of traditions experimental
in form - - emphasis on inner world / consciousness
- - dehumanization, helpless man, chaotic world
- - symbolism, stream of consciousness
- - sense of rejection, tone of desperation
- - obscurity in language
6Summary of the Story
- A poem of self-irony
- - love song vs. absence of love
- - effort of action vs. effectual inaction
- - ordinary surname vs. elegant initial J.
and middle name - Fear, boredom, despair, breakdown
7II. Subject
- Focus on the inner world
- Anti-hero dehumanization
- Alienation estrangement
81. Focus on Inner World
- dramatic monologue
- - (cf. Robert Brownings poem)
- Interior monologue stream of consciousness
talking to self ego id free association -
9Fra Lippo Lippi
- I am poor brother Lippo, by your leave!
- You need not clap your torches to my face.
- Zooks, whats to blame? You think you see a monk!
- What, tis past midnight, and you go the rounds,
- And here you catch me at an alleys end
- Where sportive ladies leave their doors ajar?
-
10Fra Lippo Lippi
- Fra Lippo Lippi (1406-1469), a Florentine painter
and friar with the Renaissance fresh appreciation
of earthly pleasures as a reaction against the
medieval attitude.
112. Anti-hero dehumanization
- Hero large, dignified, powerful, heroic like
Hamlet and Michelangelo - Anti-hero petty, ignominious, ineffectual,
passive, e.g. Prufrock a bald-haired middle-aged
man of social failure - Dehumanization insect (butterfly), crab, e.g.
Kafkas Metamorphosis (Gregor changed into a
gigantic insect, a cockroach.)
123. Alienation / Estrangement
- From the society ill at ease, bored, unwelcome
- Self-estrangement self-debasing, coward / timid
13III. Form
- Free verse no fixed metrical foot, irregular
line length, no regular rhyme, mixture of iamb,
trochee or anapest rhymed lines images of
irony, etc. - Symbols
- Allusions
- Lack of continuity
142. Symbols
- Jules La Forgue
- Symbols for complex reality
- - evening (a patient etherized upon a table -
inaction ) (John Berryman, Confessional poet) - - cat sexy, alluring and fearsome slothful
state of spirit
153. Allusions
- Dantes Inferno the characters pain
- Hamlet, Bible stories, Andrew Marvels poem
Prufrocks cowardice - John the Baptist (a prophet) Prufrocks
reputation is picked pieces his head, a
slightly bald head, is brought in on a platter,
but hes no prophet -
16Lazarus raised to life - Prufrock is like
Lazarus raised from death to life, who has
glimpsed sth. of another world and is not
understood by the women. These women are a group
of overcultured, bored people in the drawing
rooms who sip tea and discuss art (Michelangelo)
with shallowness.
17Mermaids - opposite of what the women in the
drawing rooms represent (their dried out,
over-refined life) - stands for beauty, life,
vitality
18Phrase
Source I have wept and fasted, Matthew
(The Bible) wept and prayed Among the
porcelain Emily Dickinson I cannot live
with you Ive heard the mermaids singing each
to each John Donne squeezed the
universe into a ball
Andrew Marvel To His Coy Mistress the last
but five stanza Hamlet and Polonius in
Hamlet
194. Lack of Continuity
- Sudden shifting from one scene to another
- Jumping from one thought to another
- Collage of fragmented pieces
20Assignments for Hills like White Elephants
- Modernistic elements
- - theme
- - relationship between the characters
- - narration
- - symbols
- - style
-
21Assignments for Everyday Use
- Background information research
- - The Nation of Islam and Malcolm X
- - The Black Power (Movement)
- - African Americans condition in 1950-1970
- Briefly retell the most important part of the
story that typically illustrates its theme. - Which type of female does each of the three
characters belong to? What are their attitude to
black cultural heritage? Who can inherit and
develop the black cultural heritage?