Author:
Tearle, Oliver, author.
ImprintLondon ; New York, NY : Bloomsbury Academic, 2019.
Description200 pages ; 25 cm
Note:Towards the long poem -- Writing the mother-city: Hope Mirrlees, Paris: a poem -- Battered books: Ezra Pound, Hugh Selwyn Mauberley -- A poem without a hero: T. S. Eliot, The Waste Land -- Autophagy: T. S. Eliot, "The hollow men" -- Arden to Ardennes: Richard Aldington, a fool I? the forest -- Nancy Cunard's Parallax and the "emotions of aftermath" -- Afterword: Towards the epic.
Bibliography Note:Includes bibliographical references (pages 190-196) and index.
Note:The Great War, The Waste Land and the Modernist Long Poem explores how cultural responses to the trauma of the First World War found expression in the form of the modernist long poem. Beginning with T.S. Eliot's The Waste Land, Oliver Tearle reads that most famous example of the genre in comparison with lesser known long poems, such as Hope Mirrlees's Paris: A Poem, Richard Aldington's A Fool I' the Forest and Nancy Cunard's Parallax. As well as presenting a new history of this neglected genre, the book examines the ways in which the modernist long poem represented the seminal literary form for grappling with the crises of European modernity in the wake of World War I.