The Waste Land

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    The Wasteland Analysis

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    has been used as a cautionary tale to “fear death by water” (Eliot, The Waste Land, 55). Water in The Wasteland is depicted as a fertile force, giving life to a land that was once vivid and lively. Throughout the poem, Eliot stresses the lack of water in the wasteland and the fertility that it once had. In Burial of the Dead, water is referenced in line four “stirring dull roots with spring rain” (Eliot, “The Waste Land, 3-4) Rain in this context spurts the growth of roots into plants. Emphasis

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    The Price is Wrong: The Value of Women in The Waste Land The Waste Land written by T.S. Eliot is said to be the most important poem of the 20th century. This poem is quite lengthy and composed of five sections that include many underlying themes, which is what makes the poem itself so significant. One of the topics that is mentioned most is the subject of women, and this is not done without purpose. A question left up to readers is whether or not this publicity is negative or positive. Although Eliot

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    The Wasteland Traditionally, authors begin their compositions at the beginning and then proceed to an end, creating a logical flow of information towards a conclusion. T.S. Eliot threw most traditional form out the window as he composed The Waste Land. The voice changes, the structure varies, his allusions are elusive, and the first section of the poem is entitled “The Burial of The Dead.” This of course does not speak to a beginning, but to the conclusion of what could be one or many lives

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    Example Of Existentialism

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    ‘Things of God’s cannot be known in any other way’” (Dr Niamh C, 2012). According to his biography, one of his famous poem “The Waste Land”, was written when he was facing some hardships in his life; his marriage was falling and he was suffering of nervous disorder. The physical and mental distress of the poet may provide an indication about the state of mind in which “The Waste Land” was written, which seems to have greatly influenced the choice of the title of the poem itself. The sub title “The Burial

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    Mrs. Dalloway by Virginia Woolf

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    kills them too. The city is great at providing for ‘momentary’ needs but in Elliot’s view, is doomed. There is a parrel to one of the characters in the poem and the city: The Fisher King. The Fisher King’s land is left barren due an injury on himself, making him infertile and thus his land too which Elliot likens to the state the city may find itself in (Annis).However, there is some hope. Eventually, although sterile, the fisher king does rise, and the possibility for man to rise and learn from

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    A Brief Look at Modernism

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    Modernism, which can be seen best in his poem “The Waste Land.” The concept of the wasteland was a powerful one to his generation. His poem depicts an image of the modern world through the perspective of “the common man” finding himself hopeless and confused about the condition of society. The poem paints a picture of a disjointed and desolate world through apparent confusion and chaos that that is achieved through fragments and allusions. “The Waste Land” demonstrates the present-day wasteland as a metaphor

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    T.S Eliot

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    From His Life to the Page T. S. Eliot's work was greatly influenced by his life. There was a basic pattern in his works that corresponded with the events in his life. This pattern brought about many changes and phases in his poetry. Even Eliot's attitude was reflected in his work. A quote from T. S. Eliot: The Man and His Work states, " Eliot was a man with the highest standards in his poetry, his critisism, and his behavior to others." ( Spender 34). Perhaps much of this can be attributed to his

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    Cannibalism In The Road

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    The Road is not actually about the world ending –either with a bang or a whimper. The novel is about the journey of an unnamed father and his son in the aftermath of a mysterious unnamed global catastrophe. It can be read as a cautionary tale about human wickedness and depravity. Their pilgrimage takes them through a lifeless world, where food can no longer be grown. Physical and environmental destruction is unleashed by the apocalyptic catastrophe. It is the moral disintegration

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    Most people would probably not comply with the guidelines of the future primitive. Nash’s final and perhaps most far fetched idea is “Island Civilization.” He explains taking human civilization away from the large majority of land and containing it into small portions of land, thus removing our presence from the majority of the planets soil to preserve e the wilderness. Nash’s ideas of air cities and underwater cities seem almost impossible. What really seems impossible is that Earth has about 7.2

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    AuthorLastName2 The themes of “cultural and spiritual crisis" "fragmentation" by T.S Eliot Modernism is a critical topic that has not only engulfed the contemporary literary discussion, but has attracted interest in the field of poetry. It therefore explains the critical relationship among modernism, culture and spiritual desires of the society. One of such attraction has not spared the contribution by Eliot. The poem by Eliot is characterized by a lot of themes that define and demonstrate elements

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