Assignment : 9 : The Modernist Literature
To Evaluate My Assignment
Assignment
Name : Parmar Krupa Jivabhai
Roll No. : 20
Enrollment No. : 2069108420180040
M.A.Sem : 3
Year : 2017-2019
Email id : parmarkrupaj25@gmail.com
Paper no. : 9
Paper no. : 9
Submitted to : Department of English Bhavnagar
Topic : Major themes in ' The wasteland '

The waste land is one of the most
popular poems of the 20th century. It is written by T.S. Eliot. It has been
saluted as Eliot’s masterpiece the supreme power of the poetic art in modern
times. It is a poem written in the epic mold. It presents messages for our
turbulent times. His use of complex symbols and imagery adds richness and
variety to the texture of the poem. It is full with allusions to myth, ritual,
religion, history-both past and present. These things make the poem itself a
virtual “waste land”. We can see a wide range of socio-cultural, religious and
secular experiences common to both an individual life and the collective life
of western society. It is a truly remarkable poem that broke new ground in
English poetry. There are so many themes in this poem so I would like to
discuss them one by one. The themes are like death, rebirth, the seasons, love,
lust, water, history etc.
Major themes:
1.Death
2.Life in
death
3.Rebirth
4.The
seasons
5.Lust
6.Love
1.Death :
There
are four sections and the two, of them “The burial of the Dead” and “Death by
Water” refer specifically to this theme ‘Death’. There is complicate matter
like death can mean life as in other words by dying a human being can pave the
way for new lives. The poet asks his friend: “and the same way Christ, redeemed
humanity and there by gave new life. The doubtful part of the poem is between
life and death allusions to Dante, and especially in the limbo-like vision of
the men flowing across London Bridge and through the modern city.
2.Life-in-death :
The theme of
the poem is the spiritual and emotional barrenness of the modern world. This
theme is like the living death of the modern Waste Landers. Man has lost of
vitality of spiritual and vitality of emotional. The life in modern waste land
is a life-in-death, a living death. According to Eliot’s philosophy, Human
being must act do either evil as good and it is better to do evil than do
nothing. Modern man has lost his sense of good and evil, and this keeps him
from being alive. In the modern land the people are dead. They merely exist
like dead things. They work as machine. They are to be compared to such dead things
as a stick, a gutter, a pipe. A life of complete inactivity is listlessness and
apathy. That is way winter is welcome to them and April is the crudest of
months.
3.Rebirth :
We can see
some images of the Christ along with the many other religious metaphors,
rebirth and resurrection as central themes. The waste land lays fallow and the
fisher king is powerless. The new beginning is that they needed something. Here
we can take help of water, for one water can bring about that rebirth but it
can also destroy. The poet turns the waste land in heaven with the climatic
exchange with the skies: “Datta, Dayadhvam, and Damyata.” The poet’s sight is
essentially of a world that is neither dying nor living. Hence the strength of
grail can restore life and wipe the slate clean Eliot refers frequently to
baptisms and to rivers in either spiritual or physical ways.
4.The seasons :
The poem
opens with an invocation of the month ‘April’, “April is the cruelest month.” The
season spring is depicted as cruel is a curious choice on Eliot’s part. As a
paradox it informs the rest of the poem to a great degree. The life brings also
death. It brings the seasons fluctuate from one state to another. They maintain
some sort of stat is not everything changes like history. In the end of Eliot’s
world hangs in a perpetual limbo, waiting the dawn of a new season. We can see
some aspects of seasons in the life-in-death, a life of complete inactivity,
listlessness and apathy. That is why winter is welcome to them and April is the
cruelest of months. It reminds them of the stirring of life and, they dislike
to be roused from their death-in-life. In this poem Eliot’s “waste land” there
seems little hope of renewed life as the early spring rains manage to stir only
“a little life” in the “dull roofs” and “dried tubers” that await their renewal
each spring. Ester Sunday commemorates Jesus’ resurrection, falls in April. The
poet ironically comments here that April is the “cruelest month” and also he
comments that April as the stirring of natural life and the spiritual
resurrection symbolized in Easter fill humans. Today is not with hope but fear
and apprehension. There are some phrases suggested the same things, like “dead
land”, “dull roots”, “dried tubers and “forgetful snow”, these four phrases
suggest the barrenness of earth and vacuity of life.
5.Lust :
There is
the most famous episode in the poem” the waste land”. It involves a female
typist’s sexual relation with a “carbuncular” man. In this poem Eliot
represents the scene as something similar to a rape. This chance sexual
encounter carries with it mythological luggage the violated Philomela, the
blind man Tiresias who lived for a time as a woman. There is sexuality goes
throughout the poem “the waste land”. It takes the center stage as a cause of
calamity in the part “the fire sermon”. Here in this poem the poet acts as a
lawyer “a moment’s surrender” as a part of existence in “what the thunder
said”. There are seven deadly sins in Christianity and lust may be a sin. Sex
may be too easy and two flourishing in Eliot’s London. There is action is still
is sex that produces life, that restores-sex. In needed is sex that is not
sterile. Spiritual sterility is the central motif of all these myths of the
past. Besides this there is an emphasis the sanctity of sex. There is decay and
spiritual degeneracy whenever the sexual function is perverted. The purpose of
the sexual function is procreation and it is sanctified only in marriage. When
the sexual act is separated from procreation, there is spiritual degeneracy. In
modern society there is perversion of sex and hence its degeneracy. Sex has
been separated from love, marriage and procreation. The sex-act has become
beastly or mere animal copulation and thus there is decay and spiritual
degeneracy. Hence in Eliot’s poetry man is often linked to animals. Sexual
sins, perversion of sex, have always led to degeneration and decay. The sexual
sins of the king fisher and his soldiers laid waste his kingdom, and ancient
Thebes was laid waste because its king was guilty of the sin of incest. Sexual
violence has always been there. Philomela was raped and her tongue was severed
so that she may not reveal the crime. Reference to Elizabeth and Leicester in
the song of the daughters of the Thames shows that sex relationship in the past
also has been equally futile and meaningless.
6.Love :
There are
some references regarding the theme love in this poem. The first part of the
poem “the burial of the dead”, in this part we can see some reference to
Tristan und Isolde. The second part of the poem is “The Game of chess”. In this
part there is a reference to Cleopatra and to the story of Tereus and Philomela
suggest that love in the poem “the waste land”. It is often destructive. The
characters Tristan and Cleopatra die while Tereus rapes Philomela and even the
love for the hyacinth girl leads the poet to see and know “nothing”. The
correlative love of life is found in this poem. When the poet writes regarding
“hyacinth girl” and being so in love that he did not know if he was alive as
dead. He was speechless. He was silence. This is an intense love that I
interpret this to be more for the love of life than for love of the girl. The
interest in the girl simply allows him to see the beauty of life. Joe even
tries to commit suicide at one point, but he still seems to lack a real fear of
death. However, Joe is the only one who begins to love his life. Joe finds his
love for life through his lover, his freedom, and his that Joe comes to the
realization that he has purposely ruined the life of one of his “brothers”.
During the time of T.S. Eliot the people too young to come to terms with any
real fear of death those people living during this time they did fear and thus
their love for life was enriched. “Brothers three” never really found that fear
of death they never found that true correlating love of life either.
The Changing
nature of gender roles:-
According
to Eliot’s life’s course gender roles and sexuality became increasingly
flexible. Eliot reflects those changes in his work. In the repressive Victorian
era of the nineteenth centaury, women were confines to the domestic sphere,
sexuality, was not discussed or publicly explored. People felt both
increasingly alienated from one another and empowered to break social mores.
English women began agitating in earnest for the right to vote in 1918. Women
were allowed to attend school, and women who could afford it continued their
education at those universities that began accepting women in the early
twentieth century. Eliot simultaneously lauded the end of the Victorian era and
expressed concern about the freedoms inherent in the modern age. The poem’s
central character, Tiresias is a hermaphrodite. With him Eliot creates a
character that embodies wholeness, represented by the two genders coming
together in one body.
Conclusion:-
There are
many themes. They are very helpful to understand the whole poem very easily.
There are some important aspects remain in themes so themes can be important to
study any other texts.
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