T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land (bloom's Modern Cr... -
: Bloom argues that despite its European setting and allusions, the poem is essentially an American self-elegy masking as a mythological romance.
: Bloom explores Eliot's "agon" or struggle with his literary precursor, Walt Whitman , suggesting that Whitman's elegiac voice haunts the poem's structure. Critical Themes Explored T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land (Bloom's Modern Cr...
In his introductory essay, Harold Bloom offers a distinctively "Bloomian" reading of the poem: : Bloom argues that despite its European setting
: Some sections examine how Ezra Pound's extensive editing shaped the final version of the poem. The Waste Land: T. S. Eliot, Harold Bloom - Amazon.com The Waste Land: T
: Essays delve into Eliot's use of the Fisher King and Grail legends as frameworks for a spiritually barren modern world.
: He interprets it as a "Romantic crisis poem" that merely pretends to be an exercise in Christian irony.
