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T.S. Eliot, Poetry, and Earth: The Name of the Lotos Rose
By (Author) Etienne Terblanche
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Lexington Books
23rd March 2018
United States
Professional and Scholarly
Non Fiction
Literature: history and criticism
Poetry
Paperback
224
Width 152mm, Height 230mm, Spine 18mm
354g
T. S. Eliot enjoyed a profound relationship with Earth. Criticism of his work does not suggest that this exists in his poetic oeuvre. Writing into this gap, Etienne Terblanche demonstrates that Eliot presents Earth as a process in which humans immerse themselves. The Waste Land and Four Quartets in particular re-locate the modern reader towards mindfulness of Earths continuation and ones radical becoming within that process. But what are the potential implications for ecocriticism Based on its careful reading of the poems from a new material perspective, this book shows how vital it has become for ecocriticism to be skeptical about the extent of its skepticism, to follow instead the twentieth centurys most important poet who, at the end of searing skepticism, finds affirmation of Earth, art, and real presence.
In this groundbreaking study of T. S. Eliots work, Terblanche draws on ecocriticism and Buddhism to argue that the poet had a profound relationship with the earth, defined as a system of material and aesthetic realities in which humans are entangled and interconnected. His readings of The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock, The Waste Land, and Four Quartets demonstrate Eliots awareness of Becoming and his belief in keeping time with the changes of our lives. Building on the insights of new materialism, he convincingly supports Eliots belief in poetry as embodiment. In this fine study, Terblanche both extends and interrogates previous criticism on the twentieth-centurys premier poet. -- Jewel Spears Brooker, Professor Emerita, Eckerd College
Etienne Terblanche shows us how Eliots poetry, antennae-like, reaches ahead, already anticipating the fallout of the Anthropocene and the dry sterility and dislocation of infinite semiosis. The response Poet and poet-scholar co-create a poetics of immersion. We follow algae, jellyfish, sea anemones, hippopotamuses, porpoiseseven the failure of Prufrocks 'ragged claws'into a streetless expanse of originary, vibrant, and agentic Earth. In short, the book dares to affirm. -- Aaron M. Moe, author of Zoopoetics: Animals and the Making of Poetry
This is a timely and ambitious exploration of the significance of nature to the life and work of T. S. Eliot. In its examination of the centrality of the Earth to the poet it makes an important contribution to the continuing extension of ecocriticism and suggests new ways of reading Eliot's work that recognize the breadth and complexity of modern relationships to place. -- Elizabeth Harris, Manchester Metropolitan University
Etienne Terblanche teaches and researches poetry at the Potchefstroom Campus of the North-West University in South Africa