T.S. Eliot: The Evolution of a Modernist
Date Submitted: 05/26/2004 14:33:07
About the time of World War I came a man that would help change the thinking of many people. T.S. Eliot, along with many other poets and artists, headed a new revolution known as Modernism. According to Lavender, (1998) modernism is a rebellion against the Victorian traditions of that time. Modernists believed that the industrialized nations with cash-based economies, primarily Protestant Christian, were not the "civilized" people. Instead, they saw them as greedy hypocrites who
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Kennedy, X., Gioia, D. (2001). T.S. Eliot Biography. Retrieved February 17, 2004 from the World
Wide Web: http://occawlonline.pearsoned.com/bookbind/pubbooks/kennedy2_awl/chapter9/
Lavender, C. (1998). Modernism--A Working Definition. Retrieved February 21, 2004 from the
World Wide Web: http://www.library.csi.cuny.edu/dept/history/lavender/moddef.html
Liukkonen, P. (n.d.). T(homas) S(tearns) Eliot. Retrieved February 22, 2004 from the World Wide
Web: http://www.biblion.com/litweb/biogs/eliot_t_s.html
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