The Abject in T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land
Journal: NETSOL: New Trends in Social and Liberal Sciences (Vol.6, No. 1)Publication Date: 2021-05-28
Authors : Eyesha Elahi;
Page : 24-33
Keywords : Abjection; T. S. Eliot; Julia Kristeva; Death; Jouissance;
Abstract
T. S. Eliot's monumental poem, The Waste Land, discusses hopelessness and desolation and shuns them at every turn. The speakers spurn it and despair at the desolate state of humankind and society. This paper aims to read T. S. Eliot's The Waste Land in light of Julia Kristeva's theory of abjection and Jacques Lacan's notion of jouissance. The main claim is that despite the apparent horror of desolation, the more the poem tries to repel desolation, the more it cannot help but repeatedly allude to it, as if unwillingly drawn to it, so that death and desolation are not the subject, nor are they the object, but rather the abject of the poem. The sections of the poem I feel are most relevant for such an analysis are “The Burial of the Dead” (lines 1-30) and “What the Thunder Said” (lines 322-375).
Other Latest Articles
- Revisiting Plural Marriage in the 21st Century: Polygamy, Politics and Power
- The effect of adding Streptococcus thermophilus and Lactobacillus delbrueckii subsp. bulgaricus on the acidity and overall consumer acceptability of Lebanese Kishk
- Study of genetic variability and character association for yield and yield related traits in f3 generation of blackgram (Vignamungo (L.) Hepper)
- Effects of Season on Disease Frequency and Mortality of Poultry in Owerri Urban South-Eastern Nigeria
- Bioclimate influence on seed germination and seedling morphology parameters in Pterocarpus erinaceus Poir., 1804 (Fabaceae)
Last modified: 2021-05-29 00:55:09