Mastery and escape : T.S. Eliot and the dialectic of modernism

Bibliographic Information

Mastery and escape : T.S. Eliot and the dialectic of modernism

Jewel Spears Brooker

University of Massachusetts Press, c1994

  • : [pbk.]

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Note

Bibliography: p. 255-259

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

ISBN 9780870239052

Description

This book examines modernism as a cultural and literary phenomenon. It distinguishes between two groups of modernists, one consisting mostly of exiles and characterised by internationalism and intellectual complexity, the other comprising primarily artists who consciously resist the aesthetic and political tendencies of the first group. The focus here is on the first group, and more particularly, on T.S. Eliot. Included are chapters on Mallarme and Hulme and extended discussions of Yeats and Joyce. In the social sciences, special attention is given to Frazer, Freud, and F.H. Bradley. Viewing modernism as an ideological term, the text evaluates contending theories, including those of Jeffrey Perl and of Sandra Gilbert and Susan Gubar. Brooker argues that modernism is characterised by a pattern of "mastery and escape" - a dialectical play of opposites that moves forward by looping back, attempting to secure the future by redeeming the past. She shows that this pattern is pervasive in modernist theories of history, psychology and culture. The heart of her study is an exploration of this pattern in philosophy, particularly in the neo-idealism of F.H. Bradley, whose work provided the subject of Eliot's doctoral dissertation. Brooker maintains that Eliot's strongly dialectical imagination was at once confirmed and shaped by his philosophical work. In the course of "Mastery and Escape", she analyses many of Eliot's major poems.
Volume

: [pbk.] ISBN 9781558490406

Description

These expert studies in some of the key figures behind Eliot's modernism - Mallarme, Frazer, F.H. Bradley, and T.E. Hulme - yield fresh insights which are brought to bear most fruitfully on his major poems ""Gerontion"", ""The Waste Land"" and ""Four Quartets"". A spacious and wide-ranging book by a scholar and teacher, is should be welcomed by other Eliot scholars and their students for the skill with which it situates Eliot's work in a web of modernist intellectual and cultural relations. As intellectual history, ""Mastery and Escape"" provides essential background by connecting high modernism to 19th-century philosophy and science. The book succeeds in bringing Eliot's intellectual contexts to bear on his poems.

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