The Other Side of Despair: The Search for Meaning in T.S Eliot's "The Waste Land"
Description
Ralston College presents a talk by Christopher Snook, Lecturer in the Department of Classics at Dalhousie University, on T.S. Eliot's modernist masterpiece The Waste Land.
The lecture explores the personal, historical, and literary contexts of Eliot's poem. Through an engagement with the Western tradition that is simultaneously rich and fragmented, The Waste Land confronts cultural and personal crises that have atrophied both memory and desire. Snook finds in Eliot's work a mournful modernism that serves as a serious and searching rejoinder to the more frivolous and enervated responses present in some modernist schools, most notably Dadaism.
This lecture was delivered on April 15th, 2024 at Ralston College's Savannah campus, during the final term of the second year of the MA in the Humanities Program. Applications are now open for next year's MA program.
Full scholarships are available. https://www.ralston.ac/apply
Mentioned in this episdoe:
T. S. Eliot
  "The Waste Land"
The Dial
Kathleen Raine
Virgil, Aeneid
Eliot, "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock"
Eliot, "Tradition and Individual Talent"
Eliot, The Family Reunion
  Henri Bergson
Bertrand Russell
  Virginia Woolf, Jacob's Room
Leonard Woolf
Ezra Pound
James Joyce, Ulysses
 Ludwig Wittgenstein, Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus
 Oswald Spengler, Decline and Fall of the West
 Marcel Proust, Remembrance of Things Past
 Claude McCay, Harlem Shadows
 August Strindberg
 Neo-impressionism
 Cubism
 Dadaism
 Surrealism
 Futurism
 Taxi Driver (film)
 Filippo Tommaso Marinetti, War, the World's Only Hygiene
 Hugo Ball, Dada Manifesto
 "That Shakespearian Rag"
 William Shakespeare, Hamlet
 World War I
 Henry James
 F. H. Varley
 Punic Wars
 Dante Alighieri, The Divine Comedy
 The Tempest
 Modernism
 Collage
 Pablo Picasso
  Georges Braque
Marcel Duchamp, Nude Descending Staircase; Fountain
 Montage
  F. H. Bradley
Hegel, Phenomenology of Spirit
 Plato
 The Matter of Britain
 Jessie Weston
 James Frazer
 Richard Wagner, Parsifal
 Augustine, Confessions
 Charles Dickens, Hard Times
 Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness
 Eliot, "The Hollow Men"
 Tower of Babel
 Petronius, The Satyricon
 Michelangelo, frescoes of Sistine Chapel
 Virgil, Eclogues
 Ovid, Metamorphoses
 Franz Kafka
 Chaucer, Canterbury Tales
 Thomas Middleton, Women Beware Women; A Game at Chess
 Shakespeare, Antony and Cleopatra
 Charles Baudelaire, "Au Lecteur"
 Fredrich Nietzsche, Genealogy of Morals








