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THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT

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(from The Waste Land) Ezra Pound helped him with the final form of The Waste land and Eliot dedicated it to him: Il miglior fabbro (Dante s Purgatory) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT


1
THOMAS STEARNS ELIOT
2
LIFE
  • He was born in 1888 in Missouri from a family of
    English descent
  • He graduated in philosophy at Harvard University
  • His background was English but also European, he
    extensively read Donne and the Metaphysical
    poets, and he learned Italian by studying Dante
    and expressed his appreciation for his images,
    lucidity and ability to express universal
    situations. In Paris he attended Bergsons
    lectures and read the French Symbolists.

3
  • At the outbreak of the first World War he settled
    in London where he did several jobs he was a
    bank clerk, a teacher, he wrote essays and poems
    (Prufrock and Other Observations), he edited a
    magazine of European literature,The Criterion,
    finally became the director of Faber and Faber
  • He married a ballet dancer and writer with bad
    health and nerves, like himself, they had to
    spend some time in a sanatorium in Switzerland
    where he completed The Waste Land . Poetry was
    a refugee from his unhappy life

4
  • My nerves are bad to-night. Yes, bad. Stay with
    me.
  • Speak to me. Why do you never speak. Speak.
  • What are you thinking of? What thinking? What?
  • I never know what you are thinking. Think.
  • (from The Waste Land)
  • Ezra Pound helped him with the final form of The
    Waste land and Eliot dedicated it to him
  • Il miglior fabbro (Dantes Purgatory)
  • In 1927 he became British citizen and joined the
    Church of England. His views were quite
    conservative but innovative at the same time. He
    defined himself classicist in literature,
    monarchist in politics, Anglo-Catholic in
    religion.
  • But he also wrote

5
such problems as the distinction between the
use of natural resources and their exploitation,
the use of labour and its exploitationWe are
being made aware that the organization of society
on the principle of private profit, as well as
public destruction, is leading both to the
deformation of humanity by unregulated
industrialism, and to the exhaustion of natural
resources, and that a good deal of our material
progress is a progress for which succeeding
generations may have to pay dearly.(The Idea of
a Christian Society. 1939)
  • His wifes death created a terrible sense of
    guilt I have always known hell it is in my
    bones.
  • His conversion divided his production into 2
    periods
  • Before the conversion it was characterized by a
    pessimistic, nightmarish vision of the world (The
    Waste Land)

6
  • Then the key words became purification, hope and
    joy (The Journey of the Magi)
  • During the 30s he became concerned with theatre
    as a means of denouncing ethical and
    philosophical problems (Murder in the Cathedral
    written in verse with choruses like in the Greek
    tragedy)
  • He also wrote childrens poems which were later
    adapted into the musical Cats
  • In 1948 he received the Nobel Prize for
    Literature
  • He died in London in 1965

7
WORKS
  • As a critic he wrote several influential essays
    on philosophy, religion and literature which
    stated the necessity, for the artist, of being
    impersonal separating the man who suffers from
    the mind which creates.
  • He was a modernist poet because, to convey our
    complex and varied society
  • the poet must become more and more allusive,
    more indirect, in order to forcelanguage into
    his meaning. The result is a kind of poetry
    sometimes obscure and suitable for an academic
    élite.

8
THE WASTE LAND
  • It is a long poem made up of 5 sections with no
    unity, presenting an anthology of allucinations.
    The unifying charachter is Tyresias whose
    experience allows him to include all the
    characters.
  • - The Burial of the Dead opposition between
    life and death.
  • - A Game of Chess contrast between the present
    squalor and the past splendour
  • - The Fire Sermon about present alienation
  • - Death by Water idea of spiritual shipwrek.
  • - What the Thunder Said evokes religion from
    the East and West

9
  • The poem can be read on different levels
  • Narrative 12 hours in a single day with frequent
    shifts from the present to the past linked by
    free associations of ideas as in the developement
    of thought in human minds
  • Dramatic the poem is a monologue containing
    parts of remembered dialogues where the central
    figure is Tyresias.
  • Its a set of quotations borrowed from different
    cultures and myths to achieve compression of
    meaning and style, to convey universal ideas and
    give a sense of the past as an active part of the
    present as he clarifies in Tradition and the
    Individual talent (p.80)

10
THE MYTHICAL METHOD
  • Eliot went back to the origins of western
    cultures when legends and myths were symptoms of
    spiritual attitudes which have been lost today.
  • He contrasted the present meaninglessness of life
    with allusions to Arthurian legends and the Quest
    for the Holy Grail as a metaphor for mans search
    for spirituality.
  • The myth also provided a framework for his work
    giving it a shared sense of narrative and
    allowing him to concentrate on the characters
    emotions

11
STYLE AND TECHNIQUES
  • He employed a variety of styles to reproduce the
    chaos of present civilization.
  • The Waste Land may be compared to Cubist images
    (Les Demoiselles DAvignon) therefore the meaning
    has to be found in the whole work.
  • He involved the reader with direct questions also
    expressed in different languages.
  • He learned juxtaposition from the French
    Symbolists (Laforgue) associating squalid
    elements with poetic ones
  • Repetition of words and images give the
    impression of completion and increase musicality

12
OBJECTIVE CORRELATIVE
  • He used extended metaphors and symbols to
    replace direct statements managing to communicate
    his philosophical reflections. He explained
  • The only way of expressing emotion in the form
    of art is by finding an objective correlative
    in other words, a set of objects, a situation, a
    chain of events which shall be the formula of
    that particular emotion (essay on Hamlet)
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