Summary

The Complete Prose of T. S. Eliot: The Critical Edition gathers for the first time in one place the collected, uncollected, and unpublished prose of one of the most prolific writers of the twentieth century. Highlights include all of Eliot's collected essays, reviews, lectures, and commentaries from The Criterion; essays from his student years at Smith Academy, Harvard, and Oxford; and his Clark and Turnbull lectures on metaphysical poetry. Each item has been textually edited, annotated, and cross-referenced by an international group of leading Eliot scholars, led by Ronald Schuchard, a renowned scholar of Eliot and Modernism.

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In this Volume

Vol. 3: Literature, Politics, Belief, 1927-1929

edited by Frances Dickey and Jennifer Formichelli and Ronald Schuchard
2015
summary
In 1927, T. S. Eliot was baptized and confirmed in the Church of England and became a naturalized British citizen. The works collected in Literature, Politics, Belief are contemporaneous with Eliot's conversion and exhibit his deepening interest in the history, complexity, and difficulty of belief. During this period he also developed his passion for Renaissance literature and increasingly engaged with English, European, and theological politics.

The nine essays Eliot collected in his third volume of criticism, For Lancelot Andrewes (1928), represent only a fraction of his writing from this period. He produced fifty-four pieces in 1927, forty-nine in 1928, and twenty-four in 1929, along with a small book on Dante.

Literature, Politics, Belief includes Eliot's reviews of detective novels and an edition of The Complete Sherlock Holmes Short Stories; his review of a two-volume biography of Edgar Allan Poe; and his introduction to Ezra Pound's Selected Poems. It also includes two unpublished essays, “The Return of Foxy Grandpa,” a review of Alfred North Whitehead’s Science and the Modern World and Religion in the Making, and the first publication in English of “The Contemporary Novel” (previously in French translation only), which evaluates the state of the novel in Eliot’s time with reference to D. H. Lawrence, Virginia Woolf, Aldous Huxley, and David Garnett.

Table of Contents

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1927

1928

1929


Editor Bios
Frances Dickey is Associate Professor of English at the University of Missouri and the author of books and articles on Eliot and modern poetry, including The Modernist Portrait Poem from Dante Gabriel Rossetti to Ezra Pound. In addition to editing Volume 3 of Eliot's Complete Prose, Dickey edited The Edinburgh Companion to T. S. Eliot and the Arts and is currently editor of the T. S. Eliot Studies Annual.
Jennifer Formichelli earned a BA in literary history from Boston University, and an MPhil (American literature) and PhD (English literature) from the University of Cambridge, England. She has published articles and essays on T.S. Eliot, epigraphs in English literature, Shakespeare, and William Empson. She is currently writing a book on a quadruple murder case in Boston, where she lives and teaches.
Ronald Schuchard, the Goodrich C. White Professor of English, Emeritus, at Emory University, is the author of award-winning Eliot's Dark Angel (1999) and The Last Minstrels: Yeats and the Revival of the Bardic Arts (2008). The editor of Eliot's Clark and Turnbull lectures, The Varieties of Metaphysical Poetry (1993), he is co-editor with John Kelly of The Collected Letters of W. B. Yeats, Volume 3 (1994), Volume 4 (2005), winner of the MLA's Cohen Award for a Distinguished Edition of Letters, and Volume 5 (forthcoming). A former Guggenheim fellow and founder-director of the T. S. Eliot International Summer School (2009-2013), he is a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Additional Information
ISBN
9781421418957
Related ISBN
9781421406893
DOI
10.1353/book.67878
OCLC
1118445015
Launched on MUSE
2022-12-19
Open Access
No

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T. S. Eliot