Categories
Disclaimer: Some of the links on this website are affiliate links, meaning we may earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase. This comes at no additional cost to you.
By clicking the button above, you acknowledge that you will be redirected to a third-party website and agree to their terms and conditions.
Log in to manage favorites.
The Poetry of T.S.Eliot
This free online course discusses three of T.S.Eliot’s most famous works: 'The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock' 'Preludes' and 'The Waste Land'. These Modernist poems are strongly influenced by the French symbolist tradition evoking the rich symbolism of writers like Stéphane Mallarmé and Charles Baudelaire. This course investigates Eliot’s use of metaphors to reflect metropolitan chaos urban alienation decadence and drudgery. We begin with 'The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock' (often called simply ‘Prufrock’) the earliest of Eliot’s major works. It examines the tortured psyche of the prototypical modern man: overeducated and eloquent while remaining neurotic and emotionally stunted. The speaker seems to be addressing a potential lover but Prufrock appears to know too much of life and the poem ultimately becomes a narrative of lost love. The poem is visual and cinematic alive with metropolitan pointers while also being very broken fragmented and neurotic. We demonstrate the role of neurosis as a notable element in Eliot’s early poetry and in the wider Modernist milieu.We then move on to 'Preludes' a poem of six stanzas split up into four sections each with varying rhyme schemes and patterns. The poem provides a series of images that reflect metropolitan drudgery and decadence in visual and cinematic montage styles. We explain how the poem humanizes inanimate things while humans are made to feel machine-like to probe the idea of the lack of agency in our lives. Then comes 'The Waste Land' which depicts the dystopian collapse of Western civilization and the end of spirituality and religion. The course follows the poem’s exploration of exhaustion the crisis in communication and the ruin of human intimacy. The style in Eliot's poetry is marked by allusions and quotations from other texts and mythology. 'The Waste Land' references William Shakespeare Homer and Baudelaire as does 'Prufrock'. The course breaks down how certain mundane conditions are used by the poet to produce the visual images of metropolitan mysticism. We take you through the Modernist style of mythic writing and the abstract use of metaphors which helps you to develop your style and close reading skills as the powerful and concise phrases found in poetrys develop your sense of expression and can help you master all forms of writing. This skill is in demand in the media and communications industry so this course has practical application but anyone interested in beautiful writing can benefit from close attention to Eliot’s masterpieces.
Disclaimer: Product information, including title, description, and images, is sourced/provided by our affiliate partner, Alison US CA.
Disclaimer: Some of the links on this website are affiliate links, meaning we may earn a commission if you click through and make a purchase. This comes at no additional cost to you.
By clicking the button above, you acknowledge that you will be redirected to a third-party website and agree to their terms and conditions.
Product information, including title, description, and images, is sourced/provided by our affiliate partner, Alison US CA.
Share this product with a friend:
Refer a friend and earn 0.05 CEC when they click the link, plus an additional 1.00 CEC if they register. Share this Product and boost your earnings together!
Log in to manage favorites.
Similar Products
Share this product with a friend:
Refer a friend and earn 0.05 CEC when they click the link, plus an additional 1.00 CEC if they register. Share this Product and boost your earnings together!
The Accounting Cycle and Financial Statements
The Periodic Table and Periodic Trends
Thermal Processing of Foods: Food Packaging and Regulations
Thermal Processing of Foods: Separation processes and Heat Exchangers
Thermal and Practical Aspects of Machining