T. S. Elliott 's "ridiculous land" irritates the reader. This frustration arises from a fragmentary structure of the nature, place and time of poetry and gives readers insight into the civilization after the First World War and the chaotic thinking of the writer. He showed how modern life becomes subdivided and chaotic by changing image, viewpoint, time zone. T. Elliott leads us to the limits and self that manifest themselves for freedom and transcendence, which emerges us, symbiosis between self and nature, using implications to describe myths, history and literature.
To prove the process of this change let's take the first literary text - "malaria" mentioned in the autobiographical theme of "wasteland" as an example. A passage of "Wasted Land" was rehearsed from autobiography and fused with Eliot's own way of debating the drought in the wasteland of the title of the poem. As I said, the content of the content described in the Earl's autobiography has been changed only by fusion with Elliott's legend - it's the background and meaning of the Earl's story about her noble lifestyle I changed. It is a symptom of moral and spiritual drought of modern civilization. The same remediation process due to line collapse also applies to the use of citations as literary implications of Eliot.
Abandoned land, TS Eliot (1922) 1931, TS Eliot (1888-1965) wrote 434 lines of poet divided into five parts. Symbol and extensive scope After World War I, literature reproduced the sense of social, cultural and personal division suffered by civilization. This verse contrasts past ideas and moral grandness with vulgar, decadent and worthless phenomena. This poem means that modern life is a great waste of spirit. Since Elliot was first published and became one of the main metaphors of the 20th century, this term has been used in countless short stories, novels, poems, and plays. Watanabe, Silvia (1953-)
Facts about companions of American short story document, 2nd edition (literary series companion)
In 1922, Helio saw one of the most influential and important poems of the 20th century "Wasted Land". In a complex and innovative style, it uses myths and symbols to express modern life and cultural crisis after the war. In the publication of "Wastelands" and the death of 1965, Elliott was a predominant figure in Western culture.