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T. S. EliotA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
As a modernist writer, Eliot exemplifies the efforts of this avant-garde artistic movement to redefine the notion of reality. The modernist movement began in the late 19th century and carried on through the beginning of the 20th century as a response to the many dramatic changes happening in the world at this time. Modernism is an epoch that is sometimes difficult to define, as modernist schools of thought established themselves in different nations at different times. Eliot, whose life spanned from 1888 to 1965, was alive for the entirety of the British modernist movement and is subsequently inextricably linked with that strain of modernism.
Modernist poetry is identifiable by several characteristics that depart from older literary traditions like British Romanticism. Free verse is often observable in modernist poetry, as its irregularity aims to capture the wandering thoughts of writers. Irregular rhymes and disordered visual patterns in modernist poetry also contribute to the sense of disorientation. In the Four Quartets, Eliot’s imagery is uniquely stark and foreboding, putting into words the underlying anxiety that characterizes the modernist movement. Eliot’s use of fragmented language and images enhances the theme of isolation present in much of modernist literature, inviting the reader to develop ideas of their own about the poetry rather than simply respond to established literary tropes.
The historical context in which Eliot wrote the Four Quartets and other works is critical to the understanding of Eliot’s message and tone. Eliot wrote and published the Four Quartets over a five-year period, from 1939 to 1943. During this time, World War II was ravaging Europe, the main theater of combat throughout the six years of global conflict.
Eliot’s unique approach to spiritual traditions in the Four Quartets reflects his own ambivalence towards religion, which signifies the anxieties of society at large during wartime. This sense of disillusionment and confusion may have originated in the horrors of World War I experienced by many of his generation. The horrors of World War I, which were all the more atrocious for the technological advancements that enabled young soldiers to commit acts of killing and violence en masse, had a significant impact on modernist writers and artists.
Eliot lived throughout the interwar period between World War I and World War II, from 1918 to 1939, and during this twenty-year period, he, like the rest of the world, contemplated the effects of World War I and the events that led the world back into war in 1939. For Eliot, the result was the Four Quartets and other literary masterpieces that are considered some of the finest representations of modernist literature.
By T. S. Eliot