The Cambridge Companion to T.S. EliotAnthony David Moody An essential introduction and handbook for students and other readers of T. S. Eliot. |
Contents
Eliot as a product of America | 14 |
Eliot as philosopher | 31 |
T S Eliots critical program | 48 |
Religion literature and society in the work of T S Eliot | 77 |
England and nowhere | 94 |
from Prufrock to Gerontion | 108 |
reading The Waste Land | 121 |
a poetry of verification | 132 |
music word meaning and value | 142 |
12 | 158 |
Mature | 176 |
Tradition and T S Eliot | 210 |
Modernism Postmodernism and after | 223 |
a review and a select booklist | 236 |
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Common terms and phrases
allusions American Ash-Wednesday belief Burnt Norton Cambridge Companion career Christian consciousness contemporary Criterion cultural Dante death desire dissociation drama Dry Salvages East Coker echoes edited Eliot's early Eliot's poetry emotion England English essay experience Ezra Pound F. H. Bradley Faber fact feeling Four Quartets Gerontion Greenleaf Harvard human idea ideal imagination impersonal Individual Talent interpretation language Letters lines literary criticism literature Little Gidding Louis lyric meaning metaphysical Milton mind modern modernist NTDC New York objective passage philosophy plays poem poet poet's poetic political problem prose Prufrock published quotation readers reading religion religious Sacred Wood seems sense skepticism social criticism society speak spiritual Strange Gods Sweeney T. E. Hulme T. S. Eliot theme theory Thomas Stearns Eliot thought tion tradition University Press UPUC London Valerie Eliot verse voice Waste Land William Greenleaf Eliot words writing wrote Yeats Yeats's