Dis/Continuities: Natural and Artistic Landscape/Seascape in T. S. Eliot’s “The Waste Land” and S.T. Coleridge’s “The Rime of the Ancient Mariner”
Abstract
Key words: Eliot; Coleridge; Rime; Waste Land; Romantic Poetry; Modern Poetry
Resumé: Cette étude met "La terre vaine" de T.S. Eliot dans l'état opposé de "La Rime du vieux marin" de Samuel Taylor Coleridge, en affirmant que bien que ces deux poèmes appartiennent à de différentes traditions littéraires, ils présentent certaines similitudes et des parallèles qui ne devraient pas être négligées. Cet article identifie ces parallèles au sein des éléments suivants utilisés dans ces deux poèmes: le motif de quête; ainsi que des notions de péché, punition et salut; les rites de fertilité; le réglage indifférent; la nature violée / trahie ou feminine; l'imagerie de l'eau; la figure surnaturelle et la résurrection des morts ainsi que des notions de vie en mort. Il s'avère que les éléments naturels sont incorporés dans les deux poèmes comme un moyen pour examiner les valeurs humaines et des normes de comportement contre le contexte de la nature, dans une conception selon laquelle l'homme est un outsider archétype solitaire. L'article souligne ensuite l'interdépendance des parcours symboliques dans la nature dans ces deux poèmes et le voyage dans des paysages précurseurs artistiques / poétiques, par lequel le voyage d'Eliot travers les royaumes indifférents de la Terre vaine pourrait peut-être vu comme une continuité, voire une discontinuité, du voyage halieutique des marins de Coleridge. Et avec les parallèles entre les deux poèmes dans l'esprit, l'article pose alors une question sur les limites des attitudes anti-romantiques surestimées d'Eliot.
Mots-clés: Eliot; Coleridge; Rime; Terre Vaine; PoÉSie Romantique; PoÉSie Moderne
Keywords
References
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DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3968/j.ccc.1923670020110702.031
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