Available Formats
Eliot Now
By (Author) Megan Quigley
Edited by David E. Chinitz
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
4th September 2025
United Kingdom
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Paperback
288
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Eliot Now collects new and established voices in Eliot studies, integrating contemporary critical approaches with careful attention to the newly published materials. Whether grappling with the controversial new two-volume Poems, narrating the experience of opening Eliots letters in the Emily Hale papers (until 2020 the most famous sealed archive in the world), or rereading his works through ecocritical or trans studies lenses, Eliot Now shows how this most effusively celebrated and heatedly criticized 20th-century writer continues to change the way we read literature in the 21st century. The collection concludes with six award-winning contemporary poets considering the influence of The
Waste Land on poetry today.
A provocation and an inspiration, Eliot Now is the essential guide to reading T.S. Eliot in the twenty-first century. * Rebecca Beasley, Professor of Modernist Studies, University of Oxford, UK *
This is an important book which should appeal to a wide range of scholars--those new to Eliot's poetry and prose as well as those who've been reading his work for many years. The collection makes use of the recently published Eliot materials now available to us all and also considers Eliot's work from fresh perspectives * John Whittier-Ferguson, Professor of English, University of Michigan, USA *
Multifaceted, polyvocal, and heterogenous, this thrilling collection speaks in different voices, from different viewpoints, like the endlessly proliferating poet who is its subject. Its centripetal force will unleash further debates and provocations for years to come. * Jahan Ramazani, University Professor and Edgar F. Shannon Professor at the University of Virginia, USA *
Eliot Now aims to restart the project of reading and understanding the most dominant and the most enigmatic Anglophone poet of the 20th century. Drawing on the vast amounts of previously unknown materialpoems, prose, and lettersthat have appeared over the last few decades, the contributors to this collection reopen old questions and propose new ones. Some aspects of the life, particularly the long relationship with Emily Hale, emerge more fully known and yet remain more deeply mysterious than ever before. And readings of the poetry, especially by a group of contemporary poets, show why it still has the freshness that first made it so startling. * Michael North, Distinguished Professor Emeritus, UCLA, USA *
Megan Quigley is the author of Modernist Fiction and Vagueness: Philosophy, Form, and Language (2015) and the editor of two clusters of essays on #MeToo, T. S. Eliot, and Modernism in Modernism/modernity Print+ (2019, 2020). She has published essays in the James Joyce Quarterly, Modernism/modernity, Philosophy and Literature, Poetics Today, LARB, the T. S. Eliot Studies Annual, and nonsite. She is an Associate Professor of English at Villanova University.
David E. Chinitz, Professor of English and Associate Dean for Faculty Affairs in the College of Arts & Sciences at Loyola University Chicago, is the author of T. S. Eliot and the Cultural Divide (2003) and Which Sin To Bear Authenticity and Compromise in Langston Hughes(2013). His Complete Prose of T. S. Eliot, Volume 6: The War Years, 1940-1946 (co-edited with Ronald Schuchard) won the 2019 MLA Prize for a Scholarly Edition. He has served as president of the Modernist Studies Association and the International T. S. Eliot Society.