The Waste Land (Norton Critical Editions): Amazon.co.uk.
The Waste Land: a critical view the Waste Land’ In the autumn of 1921.And with the constructive suggestions of Ezra Pound about the structure of the poem ,the present draft of the poem, which was published in 1922, has become a classic.It is also, more Importantly, the symbol of a whole age, signifying a new kind of poetry and a poetic revolution In modern English Literature and culture.
The Waste Land is undoubtedly the most contentious and possibly the greatest poem of the 20th century. The reactions to and interpretations of the poem are as diverse as the multiple voices Eliot conjurs throughout the work. This edition is useful because it presents the variety of critical responses to the poem; historical and contemporary. The extensive bibliography points the reader to.
Jarrell, R: Poetry and the Age. LIGHT ON THE POET'S WASTE LAND; Randall Jarrell's Critical Essays Probe The Past and the Future of the Moderns.
This book features ten critical essays on ecodocumentaries written by eminent scholars from India, USA, Ireland, Finland and Turkey in the area of ecocinema studies. Situating social documentaries with explicit ecological form and content, the volume takes relational positions on political, cultural and conservational aspects of natures and cultures in various cultural contexts. Documentaries.
The Waste Land is a poem by T. S. Eliot, widely regarded as one of the most important poems of the 20th century and a central work of modernist poetry. Published in 1922, the 434-line poem first appeared in the United Kingdom in the October issue of Eliot's The Criterion and in the United States in the November issue of The Dial.It was published in book form in December 1922.
At the beginning of the novel, most of the problems are attributed to the fact that man is separated from the land and that the land is becoming a waste land. This is partly represented by the fact that the new generation leaves the native land for the city. At the end of the novel, there is hope that humanity can rediscover the land and make it into a new Canaan.
Modernism is the broad term used to describe post—World War I literature that employs techniques Eliot uses in The Waste Land. These techniques, and all the techniques associated with modernist literature, expressed a rebellion against traditional literature, which was noted by its distinct forms and rules. For example, in traditional poetry, poets often sought uniformity in stanza length.