The Literary Criticism of T.S. Eliot: New Essays
By (Author) David Newton-De Molina
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
7th November 2013
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: poetry and poets
821.912
Hardback
216
278g
In his time T.S. Eliot established a new critical orthodoxy by which no major modern critic in England or America remained unaffected, but a decade has passed since his death and a generation or more since his extraordinary influence was at its height. It has therefore seemed worth attempting a fresh historical revaluation of Eliots critical achievement and the nine distinguished scholars whom Dr Newton-De Molina approached responded readily to his invitation that they undertake such a project. Their essays range widely over the various aspects of Eliots critical activity and place it in the context not only of his endeavours as poet and dramatist but also of his formal training as a philosopher and of his conversion to Christianity. They contrast the early and later work (not forgetting Eliots own retrospective comments on the former), consider its relation to the English critical and poetic tradition, and seek to show in what ways criticism may derive new impetus from the example both of Eliots strengths and of his limitations.
David Newton-De Molina is Lecturer in English Literature, University of Edinburgh, UK.