It’s All About Economics –The Urban Ecology in T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land

This paper aims to reveal a social-economic pattern within T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land, aModernistic post-apocalyptic poem, in which the inner self of the modern urbanite is fragmented bythe post-war reality of the beginning of the last century. The main space in which the human beingdwells is the c...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Dragoș Osoianu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ovidius University Press 2016-01-01
Series:Ovidius University Annals: Economic Sciences Series
Subjects:
Online Access:http://stec.univ-ovidius.ro/html/anale/ENG/2016/2016-I-full/Section-III/18.Osoianu_Dragos.pdf
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Summary:This paper aims to reveal a social-economic pattern within T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land, aModernistic post-apocalyptic poem, in which the inner self of the modern urbanite is fragmented bythe post-war reality of the beginning of the last century. The main space in which the human beingdwells is the city, a culturally constructed place of conflicting psychological, social, economic andnatural energies. The urbanite’s interior conflict is objectified toward the social otherness and,further, over the natural other, in this way, a hierarchy of power between the social human and thenatural environment having been established. This collision between incompatible and unnaturalagencies is mediated by the transformation of nature in urban space through means of economicand cultural production and consumption. The sterile land represents the direct aftermath of theover-exploited, over-consumed and over(re)produced nature, which has become a social waste.
ISSN:2393-3127
2393-3127