The philosophy of T.S. Eliot : from skepticism to a surrealist poetic, 1909-1927
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Bibliographic Information
The philosophy of T.S. Eliot : from skepticism to a surrealist poetic, 1909-1927
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1986
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Kobe Shoin Women's University Library / Kobe Shoin Women's College Library
930.262/181212488907
Note
Includes index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
T. S. Eliot's mind encompasses just about every important avant-garde intellectual movement of his time. His thought, as well as his poetry, represents an essential and original achievement within Modernism. This study presents Eliot's unique synthesis of contemporary philosophy, psychology, anthropology, and studies in mysticism, and demonstrates how it is responsible for the nature of his religious belief, the basic tenets of his literary theory, and the figurative, structural, and dramatic aspects of his verse, pervading virtually everything he wrote throughout his life. The chapters are Skepticism, Mysticism, The Unconscious, Primitive Experience, Mythic Consciousness, and A Surrealist Poetic.
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