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  1. Há 5 dias · Eliot said that the poet-critic must write “ programmatic criticism”—that is, criticism that expresses the poet’s own interests as a poet, quite different from historical scholarship, which stops at placing the poet in his background.

  2. 27 de abr. de 2024 · Eliots “Juvenile” Poems and the Tradition of the Grotesque Body. If Lewis’s visually grotesque bodies are a way of grasping the world beyond sight with the same intensity that vision confronts us with, then T.S. Eliots poems are grotesque for similar reasons. Eliot turns the human inside out, with visuality that Chao identifies as ...

    • David Cruickshank
  3. 1 de mai. de 2024 · Eliot is best-known for his poetry, which is among the most famous modernist writing in the English language. But Eliots plays and works of criticism are also worthy of mention, so in our pick of Eliots best books below, we make room for a couple of those, too.

  4. Há 5 dias · Less interesting for the casual reader, but as important historically, is Eliots literary criticism. He is perhaps the most famous American literary critic, having been an enormous influence on the school of New Criticism.

  5. Há 3 dias · Who is the Australian poet behind “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock”? Introducing T.S. Eliot: T.S. Eliot, although often associated with the United States and England, was actually born in St. Louis, Missouri, in the United States, in 1888. He later moved to the United Kingdom and became a British citizen in 1927.

  6. 6 de mai. de 2024 · The major aspects and issues of his life and thought are assessed: his American origins and his becoming English; his position as a philosopher; his literary, social, and political criticism; and the evolution of his religious sense.

  7. 29 de abr. de 2024 · The reception of the poem by critics and audiences alike was mostly positive. Marion Strobel of Poetry magazine described it as a “scrupulous psychological study” and praised it for the “pervasive beauty of the imagery, the rhythms used, and the nice repetitions” (Strobel 159).