T. S. Eliot and Organicism

Author:   Jeremy Diaper (University of Birmingham)
Publisher:   Liverpool University Press
ISBN:  

9781800859616


Pages:   232
Publication Date:   01 April 2021
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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T. S. Eliot and Organicism


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Author:   Jeremy Diaper (University of Birmingham)
Publisher:   Liverpool University Press
Imprint:   Liverpool University Press
ISBN:  

9781800859616


ISBN 10:   1800859619
Pages:   232
Publication Date:   01 April 2021
Audience:   General/trade ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

'Diaper's meticulously researched exploration of Eliot's engagements with the organicist movement of the 1930s invites us to reconsider the author many still associate with modernism at its most anthropocentric. We find instead a poet invested in the practicalities of food, dirt, sustainable human habitation, and the webs of politics and economics in which it is all entangled. Diaper compellingly argues that it is impossible to understand Eliot's social criticism and poetics, and even his faith, aside from his concern for the fate of actual, living loam... This touchstone work will be referenced in any future ecocritical study of Eliot. Beyond this, the book is an important contribution to the ongoing greening of modernist studies. The last decade produced several works on the more-than-human investments of modernism, each of which has had to argue vigorously for the validity of combining modernism and ecocriticism. One hopes that we're finally now in a moment when we can do away with the anxious justifications tucked into our prologues and intros. Indeed, Diaper's book perhaps signals that such a moment is here'. Julia E. Daniel, ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment 'Certain readers may be unfamiliar with the relevant contexts that shaped Eliot's 'agricultural sensibility' and in this respect one of the delights of the book, as well as the lucidity of Diaper's prose, is the meticulous positioning of the author in relation to various agrarian, agricultural and environmental concerns... Overall, Diaper's book is written with sharp clarity, is logically structured and meticulously historicised, and, even though some of the close readings may induce further questions and critical responses, the implications are far reaching'. Scott Freer, The Journal of The T. S. Eliot Society (UK) 'Jeremy Diaper has drawn a meticulous portrait of Eliot as ecocritic avant la lettre... His work establishes a solid historical basis for future environmental readings of Eliot - the poet of soil, air, and water.' Frances Dickey, Essays in Criticism 'Jeremy Diaper's argument in T. S. Eliot and Organicism goes way beyond such circumstantial considerations, though, presenting a wealth of evidence to show that Eliot attached great importance to farming and to a thriving rural culture and economy... Diaper's monograph offers a convincing case for T. S. Eliot's major role in propagating the organicist philosophy.' Philip Conford, Agricultural History Review 'Jeremy Diaper's lucid and detailed study locates Eliot at the heart of the early organic movement ... this book will prove essential reading not only for students of organicism, but for all those with a general interest in the culture of mid-twentieth-century England as reflected in the work of its greatest modernist poet.' Richard Moore-Colyer, Rural History 'The most valuable part of T. S. Eliot and Organicism is its thorough trawling through the files of the New English Weekly and the Christian News-Letter, two publications which Eliot supported and contributed to, especially once the Criterion had closed. This yields ample evidence of parallels between that of Eliot's work and a number of prominent writers on agriculture and its place in a good society.' Stefan Collini, The Times Literary Supplement


'The most valuable part of T. S. Eliot and Organicism is its thorough trawling through the files of the New English Weekly and the Christian News-Letter, two publications which Eliot supported and contributed to, especially once the Criterion had closed. This yields ample evidence of parallels between that of Eliot's work and a number of prominent writers on agriculture and its place in a good society.' Stefan Collini, The Times Literary Supplement 'Jeremy Diaper's lucid and detailed study locates Eliot at the heart of the early organic movement ... this book will prove essential reading not only for students of organicism, but for all those with a general interest in the culture of mid-twentieth-century England as reflected in the work of its greatest modernist poet.' Richard Moore-Colyer, Rural History 'Jeremy Diaper's argument in T. S. Eliot and Organicism goes way beyond such circumstantial considerations, though, presenting a wealth of evidence to show that Eliot attached great importance to farming and to a thriving rural culture and economy... Diaper's monograph offers a convincing case for T. S. Eliot's major role in propagating the organicist philosophy.' Philip Conford, Agricultural History Review 'Jeremy Diaper has drawn a meticulous portrait of Eliot as ecocritic avant la lettre... His work establishes a solid historical basis for future environmental readings of Eliot - the poet of soil, air, and water.' Frances Dickey, Essays in Criticism 'Certain readers may be unfamiliar with the relevant contexts that shaped Eliot's 'agricultural sensibility' and in this respect one of the delights of the book, as well as the lucidity of Diaper's prose, is the meticulous positioning of the author in relation to various agrarian, agricultural and environmental concerns... Overall, Diaper's book is written with sharp clarity, is logically structured and meticulously historicised, and, even though some of the close readings may induce further questions and critical responses, the implications are far reaching'. Scott Freer, The Journal of The T. S. Eliot Society (UK) 'Diaper's meticulously researched exploration of Eliot's engagements with the organicist movement of the 1930s invites us to reconsider the author many still associate with modernism at its most anthropocentric. We find instead a poet invested in the practicalities of food, dirt, sustainable human habitation, and the webs of politics and economics in which it is all entangled. Diaper compellingly argues that it is impossible to understand Eliot's social criticism and poetics, and even his faith, aside from his concern for the fate of actual, living loam... This touchstone work will be referenced in any future ecocritical study of Eliot. Beyond this, the book is an important contribution to the ongoing greening of modernist studies. The last decade produced several works on the more-than-human investments of modernism, each of which has had to argue vigorously for the validity of combining modernism and ecocriticism. One hopes that we're finally now in a moment when we can do away with the anxious justifications tucked into our prologues and intros. Indeed, Diaper's book perhaps signals that such a moment is here'. Julia E. Daniel, ISLE: Interdisciplinary Studies in Literature and Environment


'Jeremy Diaper's argument in T. S. Eliot and Organicism goes way beyond such circumstantial considerations, though, presenting a wealth of evidence to show that Eliot attached great importance to farming and to a thriving rural culture and economy... Diaper's monograph offers a convincing case for T. S. Eliot's major role in propagating the organicist philosophy.' Philip Conford, Agricultural History Review 'Jeremy Diaper's lucid and detailed study locates Eliot at the heart of the early organic movement ... this book will prove essential reading not only for students of organicism, but for all those with a general interest in the culture of mid-twentieth-century England as reflected in the work of its greatest modernist poet.' Richard Moore-Colyer, Rural History 'The most valuable part of T. S. Eliot and Organicism is its thorough trawling through the files of the New English Weekly and the Christian News-Letter, two publications which Eliot supported and contributed to, especially once the Criterion had closed. This yields ample evidence of parallels between that of Eliot's work and a number of prominent writers on agriculture and its place in a good society.' Stefan Collini, The Times Literary Supplement


Author Information

Jeremy Diaper has published numerous articles and chapters on T. S. Eliot's agrarianism and the history of the organic husbandry movement. His essays have appeared in Agricultural History, Agricultural History Review, the Journal of the T. S. Eliot Society UK, T. S. Eliot Studies Annual and Literature & History. He is currently editing a special issue of Modernist Cultures on ""Modernism and the Environment"" and a volume of essays on Eco-Modernism.

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