Wednesday, May 29, 2019

Argument and Parody in T.S. Eliots Four Quartets Essay -- T.S. Eliot

The Seduction of Argument and the Danger of Parody in T.S. Eliots Four Quartets Though its more melodic passages present detailed and evocative imagery, substantial portions of T.S. Eliots Four Quartets afford no such easy approach. Since the initial appearance of Burnt Norton it has been a critical unglamorous to regard these portions of the text as at once its most conceptually profound and its most formally prosaic. Of course, the Quartets offer enough cues toward this critical attitude that it whitethorn fairly be said to reside within the numbers at least as much as it is imposed from without. As the text of the numbers itself apparently gives license to the view that its poetry does not matter, the preponderance of critical attention to the Quartets non-lyrical passages has been devoted to philosophical and theological paraphrase of its argument, to explicating the system of belief or thought behind the words. Meanwhile, relatively little attention has been paid to the work ing of the poetry itself, to the construction of the presumed meaning, in these discursive or conceptual passages. Seduced by the entrust for a systematic argument, criticism has overestimated these passages straightforwardness and largely neglected their ambiguity and indeterminacy. The seductive voice of argument which is already a voice within the poem invites conceptual scrutiny but repels formal analysis it displaces the concerns of poetry in order to work its poetry undetected. I will be reading critically several critical discussions, but always in the belief that the criticisms concerns are not projected onto the poem from without, but express the critical voices within the poem. The conquest of reading the Four Quartets as a systema... ...loise Knapp. T.S. Eliots Negative Way. Cambridge, Mass. Harvard University Press, 1982. Kenner, Hugh. The Invisible Poet T.S. Eliot. capital of the United Kingdom Methuen & Co., 1965. Orwell, George. T.S. Eliot. In T.S. Eliot Four Quar tets A Casebook. Ed. Bernard Bergonzi. London Macmillan, 1969. Reed, Henry. Chard Whitlow. In Collected Poems, p. 15. peeled York Oxford University Press, 1991. Shapiro, Karl. Poetic Bankruptcy. In T.S. Eliot Four Quartets A Casebook. Ed. Bernard Bergonzi. London Macmillan, 1969. Thompson, Eric. T.S. Eliot The Metaphysical Perspective. Carbondale, Ill. Southern Illinois University Press, 1963. Times Literary Supplement. Mr T.S. Eliots Confession. In T.S. Eliot Four Quartets A Casebook. Ed. Bernard Bergonzi. London Macmillan, 1969. Traversi, Derek. T.S. Eliot The Longer Poems. London The Bodley Head, 1976.

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