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T.S. Eliot and the poetics of evolutionT.S. Eliot and the poetics of evolution

T.S. Eliot and the poetics of evolution2000

Lois A. Cuddy

About this book

"Cuddy examines how the nineteenth-century union of evolution, history, and myth became Eliot's definition of the Western Tradition from Homer to the present. Homer's Odyssey and the tradition it inspired became one of Eliot's most successful paradigms for historical re/vision of women, father/son relationships, cultural evolution, time, and poet's struggle with words.". "Guided by Eliot's own allusions and references to specific authors and historical moments, Cuddy adds a feminist, cultural, and intertextual perspective to the familiar critical interpretations of Eliot's work in order to reread poems and plays through nineteenth-century ideologies and knowledge set against our own time. By considering the implications and consequences of Eliot's culturally approved assumptions, this study further reveals how Eliot was trapped between the idea of Evolution as a unifying project and the reality of his own and his culture's hierarchical (and fragmenting) beliefs about class, gender, religion, and race. Cuddy concludes by exploring how this conflict undermined Eliot's mission of unity and influenced his (and Modernism's) place in history."--BOOK JACKET.

Details

First published
2000
OL Work ID
OL34741W

Subjects

KnowledgePoeticsScienceInfluenceEvolution in literatureEvolution (Biology) in literatureNatural historyLiterature and scienceCriticism and interpretationHistoryEliot, t. s. (thomas stearns), 1888-1965Darwin, charles, 1809-1882EvolutionKnowledge and learning

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