Title: T.S. Eliot
1T.S. Eliots The Waste Land
2Background
- Eliot was influenced by World War I, which
impacted themes of the poem - The poem is split into five sections The Burial
of the Dead, A Game of Chess, The Fire Sermon,
Death by Water, and What the Thunder Said - Does not follow epic poem
- structure exactly, but for a purpose
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/T._S._Eliot
3Plot
- No exact plot, unlike other epic poems
- The waste land is without water and is
presented as barren, but people still live in it
http//www.ww1battlefields.co.uk/somme/newfoundlan
d.html
4Characters
- No main character
- Characters are presented in the poem mostly
through vague conversations, and some are
nameless - Used to show what life in the waste land is like
- Controversial characters
5Characters - Tiresias
- Speaker in The Fire Sermon
- Blind prophet that appears in Greek tragedies
- Hermaphrodite
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tiresias
6Epic Elements Begins in media res
- When the poem begins, the waste land itself is
already established and is under brown fog
(Eliot, 1922, p. 2671) - The poem begins after World War I, and focuses on
the aftermath - However, it does not focus on a tale in this
aftermath, like other epic poems
http//www.ww1battlefields.co.uk/images/mud.jpg
7Epic Elements Vast Setting
- The Waste Land references Europe as a whole, with
focuses on England (specifically London) and
Germany - Through the perspectives of different speakers,
the reader can never be sure of where they are,
making the setting feel even larger
8Epic Elements Mythology References
- Many epic poems reference mythology in a more
direct way than The Waste Land - Mythological beings are present, are treated as
if they once existed, or are seen through divine
intervention - Tiresias is the only figure of mythology that is
truly present
9Epic Elements Mythology References
- Eliot uses mythology as a means of symbolism
- The Burial of the Dead
- You gave me hyacinths first a year ago
- They called me the hyacinth girl.
- Yet, when we came back, late, from the Hyacinth
garden - Your arms full, and your hair wet, I could not
- Speak, and my eyes failed, I was neither
- Living nor dead, and I knew nothing.
- (Eliot, 1922, p. 2616)
10Epic Elements Mythology References
- Hyacinth was the name of a young man loved and
accidentally killed by Apollo in Greek mythology
(Greenblatt, 2006, p. 2616)
http//sk.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hyakinthos
11Epic Elements (Lack of) Epic Hero
- The Waste Land has no epic hero
- Absence of a hero in the poem is just as
important as having a hero in a traditional epic
poem - Shows lack of hope
- Hero could not portray cultural values because
there are no values in the waste land - Hero could not descend because the waste land is
so disconnected
12Deconstruction and Modernization
- Eliot neglecting or bending core elements of epic
poetry is intentional - Epics are an ancient genre of poetry
- Eliot, a modernist, took aspects of an epic and
changed them to fit what he wanted to express - More practical or realistic in comparison to
traditional epics
13Themes
- Sexuality
- Tiresias forms bridge between man and woman
- Hyacinth girl
- In Burial of the Dead
- In the original text, the hyacinth girl was
male (Miller, 1998) I remember The hyacinth
garden. Those are pearls that were his eyes,
yes!
14Themes
- Damage to Society/Humanity
- In context with World War I influences, the waste
land came to be because of human action - The waste land is an unreal city, under brown
fog (Eliot, 1922, p. 2617) - Humans are forced to live in
- the waste land, and
- characters act detached
- from their surroundings
http//fineartamerica.com/featured/world-war-i-bat
tlefield-granger.html
15Conclusion
- Eliot set to show the effects of World War I
through a modern technique - He took an old genre and renewed it to set it
apart from the writing of other authors