Divine Cartographies
God, History, and Poiesis in W. B. Yeats, David Jones, and T. S. Eliot
Series: Oxford English Monographs;
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Product details:
- Publisher OUP Oxford
- Date of Publication 30 June 2016
- ISBN 9780198777779
- Binding Hardback
- No. of pages258 pages
- Size 223x143x18 mm
- Weight 422 g
- Language English 0
Categories
Short description:
A study of how three modernist poets (Yeats, Jones, & Eliot) at the height of their careers drew on their religious beliefs to transform some of their greatest poems into maps of the relationship between history and eternity.
MoreLong description:
Recent critical studies of late modernism have explored the changing sense of both history and artistic possibility that emerged in the years surrounding World War II. However, relatively little attention has been devoted to the impact of poets' theological deliberations on their visions of history and their poetic strategies. Divine Cartographies: God, History, and Poiesis in W. B. Yeats, David Jones, and T. S. Eliot triangulates key texts as attempts to map theologically driven visions of the relation between history and eternity. W. David Soud considers several poems of Yeats's final and most fruitful engagement with Indic traditions, Jones's The Anathemata, and Eliot's Four Quartets. For these three poets, working at the height of their powers, that project was inseparable from reflection on the relation between the individual self and God; it was also bound up with questions of theodicy, subjectivity, and the task of the poet in the midst of historical trauma. Drawing on the fields of Indology, theology, and history of religions as well as literary criticism, Soud explores in depth and detail how, in these texts, theology is poetics.
MoreTable of Contents:
General Introduction
The Divine Self at Play: History and Liberation
The Figure and the Map: The Anathemata of David Jones
The Silence and the Moment: The Dialectical Poetics of Four Quartets
Afterword
Bibliography