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Abbreviations Used for Works by T. S. Eliot |
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1. The Poet and the Pressure Chamber: Eliot’s Life (Anthony Cuda, University of North Carolina–Greensboro). |
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2. Eliot’s Ghosts: Tradition and its Transformations (Sanford Schwartz, Penn State University). |
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3. T. S. Eliot and the Symbolist City (Barry J. Faulk, Florida State University). |
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4. Not One, Not Two: Eliot and Buddhism (Christina Hauck, Kansas State University). |
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5. Yes and No: Eliot and Western Philosophy (Jewel Spears Brooker, Eckerd College, Florida). |
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6. A Vast Wasteland? Eliot and Popular Culture (David E. Chinitz, Loyola University Chicago). |
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7. Mind, Myth, and Culture: Eliot and Anthropology (Marc Manganaro, Gonzaga University). |
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8. “Where are the eagles and the trumpets?”: Imperial Decline and Eliot’s Development (Vincent Sherry, Washington University, St. Louis). |
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9. Searching for the Early Eliot: Inventions of the March Hare (Jayme Stayer, writer). |
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10. Prufrock and Other Observations: A Walking Tour (Frances Dickey, University of Missouri). |
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11. Disambivalent Quatrains (Jeffrey M. Perl, Bar-Ilan University, Israel). |
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12. “Gerontion”: The Mind of Postwar Europe and the Mind(s) of Eliot (Edward Brunner, Southern Illinois University, Carbondale). |
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13. “Fishing, with the arid plain behind me”: Difficulty, Deferral, and Form in The Waste Land (Michael Coyle, Colgate University, Hamilton, NY). |
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14. The Enigma of “The Hollow Men” (Elisabeth Däumer, Eastern Michigan University). |
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15. Sweeney Agonistes: A Sensational Snarl (Christine Buttram, Winona State University, Minnesota). |
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16. “Having to construct”: Dissembly Lines in the “Ariel” Poems and Ash-Wednesday (Tony Sharpe, Lancaster University, UK). |
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17. “The inexplicable mystery of sound”: Coriolan, Minor Poems, Occasional Verses (Gareth Reeves, Durham University, UK). |
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18. Coming to Terms with Four Quartets (Lee Oser, writer). |
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19. “Away we go”: Poetry and Play in Old Possum’s Book of Practical Cats and Andrew Lloyd Webber’s Cats (Sarah Bay-Cheng, University at Buffalo–SUNY). |
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20. Eliot’s 1930s Plays: The Rock, Murder in the Cathedral, and The Family Reunion (Randy Malamud, Georgia State University, Atlanta). |
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21. Eliot’s “Divine” Comedies: The Cocktail Party, The Confidential Clerk, and The Elder Statesman (Carol H. Smith, Rutgers University). |
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22. Taking Literature Seriously: Essays to 1927 (Leonard Diepeveen, Dalhousie University) |
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23. He Do the Critic in Different Voices: The Literary Essays after 1927 (Richard Badenhausen, Westminster College, Salt Lake City). |
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24. In Times of Emergency: Eliot’s Social Criticism (John Xiros Cooper, University of British Columbia). |
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25. Eliot’s Poetics: Classicism and Histrionics (Lawrence Rainey, writer). |
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26. T. S. Eliot and Something Called Modernism (Ann Ardis, writer). |
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27. Conflict and Concealment: Eliot’s Approach to Women and Gender (Cyrena Pondrom, University of Wisconsin–Madison). |
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28. Eliot and “Race”: Jews, Irish, and Blacks (Bryan Cheyette, University of Reading, UK). |
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29. “The pleasures of higher vices”: Sexuality in Eliot’s Work (Patrick Query, US Military Academy, West Point, NY). |
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30. “An occupation for the saint”: Eliot as a Religious Thinker (Kevin J. H. Dettmar, Pomona College, Claremont, CA). |
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31. Eliot’s Politics (Michael Levenson, University of Virginia). |
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32. Keeping Critical Thought Alive: Eliot’s Editorship of the Criterion (Jason Harding, University fo Durham, UK). |
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33. Making Modernism: Eliot as Publisher (John Timberman Newcomb, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign). |
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34. Eliot and the New Critics (Gail McDonald, University of Southampton, UK). |
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35. “T. S. Eliot rates socko!”: Modernism, Obituary, and Celebrity (Aaron Jaffe, University of Louisville, Kentucky). |
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36 . Eliot’s Critical Reception: “The quintessence of twenty-first-century poetry” (Nancy K. Gish, University of Southern Maine). |
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37. Radical Innovation and Pervasive Influence: The Waste Land (James Longenbach, University of Rochester, NY). |
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Bibliography of Works by T. S. Eliot. |
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