YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :Literary Modernism in The Waste Land by T S Eliot Mrs Dalloway by Virginia Woolf
Essays 31 - 60
this essay utilizes a quote by F.R. Leavis to argue that T.S. Eliot's Waste Land and Stephen King's novel Misery qualify them as t...
This essay pertains to T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land and Sigmund Freud's Civilization and Its Discontent, as well as the influence t...
the most important elements of modernist literature is that which involves perspective. With modernist literature this involves "t...
In five pages literary modernism is defined and then illustrated in such works as James Joyce's 'The Dead' from Dubliners, 'The G...
In ten pages the depiction of sexuality in Lawrence's novel and Eliot's poem are compared and contrasted. There are 8 bibliograph...
In a paper consisting of 10 pages the aethetic, scientific, and sociopolitical influences on Eliot's 1922 masterpiece is considere...
In six pages this paper examines 20th century modernist literature in a consideration of such concepts as impressionism, postmoder...
and all through the power of words. Eliot doesnt start slowly as his first four lines parody the first four lines of Chaucers fif...
The Voyage Out would be published, followed by Night and Day, and Jacobs Room, which was based in part on the life of her beloved ...
world was worth living in. Interestingly enough, one critic indicates that this is where Eliot uses the symbolism of the Holy G...
she does "light housekeeping," which is also not consistent with someone who needs assistance getting out of bed. However, the stu...
who thinks about her own weaknesses, yet also truly sees what she perhaps should be. We note how Clarissa, though strong and se...
criticism points toward a different orientation, as she accuses previous writers of materialism, and explains this accusation by ...
"exciting, gripping story of crime and bloodshed" (Anonymous PG) leaves the reader with many unanswered questions, which only serv...
cannot go when he obviously want it so badly. James feels that his fathers sarcastic rejection of the idea of visiting the lightho...
which you are now for the first time entering?"(Woolf). And, even in the modern era, most women still find this to be a certainty,...
satisfying sexual or intimate relationship because of it. She essentially lived a life wherein she was torn between the desire to ...
This paper examines Virginia Woolf's feminist ideology in her various novels and essays. The author contends that Woolf believed ...
Virginia Woolf's 1928 novel is the focus of attention here. Gender is discussed in this context. Woolf seems to claim that gende...
In 6 pages this paper examines how self determination is thematically portrayed in 'The Red Wheelbarrow' by William Carlos William...
the reader encounters countless examples of the "blessed and the damned, as well as every gradation between" (Kearns 1). Pound him...
are locked out of the creative heart of society is addressed quite literally by Woolf in her first chapter. The narrator is medita...
trees will give no shelter and the crickets, no relief" (Wasteland by TS Eliot). When looking at this particular reference one c...
glimpses into an embittered world in transition, in which survivors of the war hoped of finding amid the debris and dead bodies a ...
is mocking our hopes, and at the same time the teasing promise of Spring is false. With the coming of this Spring we can also envi...
and the whole is held together; for whereas in active life she would be netting and separating one thing from the other; she would...
understand, and its relation to the twentieth century even more so. But it is important to recognize that even though the first kn...
everything has been parched almost to nonexistence. The stanza closes with a line from a German translation of Tristan and Isolde,...
In five pages this paper contrasts and compares criticisms of this poem by T.S. Eliot and the changing interpretations that have t...
stone, but by the relation of human being to human being" (71). She then takes on the voice of an advocate for the rights of wome...