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The significance of the Modern Waste Land - Coggle Diagram
The significance of the Modern Waste Land
the waste land
title
Miss J. L. Weston's book
ritual to romance
theme
anthropological
significance
fertility ritual
development of impersonaity
gerontion
extreme limit
significance of the waste land
rich disorganisation of the poem
disjointedness
erudition
annoyed readers
literary borrowing
allusions
reflect
present state of civilization
traditions and cultures
historical imagination
past contemporary
incessant rapid changes
characterises machine age
results
continuity
uprooting of life
last metaphor
peculiar aptness
immemorial ways of life
rooted in the soil
remoteness of civilisation
nature rhythms
ironical contrast
anthropological theme
vegetation cults
fertility ritual
sympathetic magic
harmony of human culture
natural environment
extreme sense
unity of life
modern waste land
sex
sterile
breeding not life and fulfilment
digest
accidia
unanswerable questions
anthropological background
positive functions
evoking particular sense
unity of life
level of experience
prom works
mode of consciousness
poem belongs
anthropology
peculiarly significant expression
scientific spirit
eye belief
religions
moralities
human habits
outlook prevails
sanctions wither
modern literature
sense of futility
contemporary consciousness
great deal
anthropological
background of waste land
Tiresias deserves attention
grievance
salience
what the poem is
effort to focus
human consciousness
character of mode of consciousness
lack of organising principle
absence of inherent direction
characteristic of age
age of psycho-analyis
age in last section
ulysses
appropriate impersonation
Mr Eliot
hooded figure
jesus
christ
hanged god
sacrificed gods
agony of waste land
what the thunder said
drouth
thirst for water of faith and healing
religion orchestrates the poem
dry sterile thunder without rain
no resurrection/ renewal
opening passage
loses all buoyancy
dragging persistent movement
hopeless exhaustion
imagined water as a torment
transition to passage
hooded figure
the third
walks besides you
A Game of Chess
method of poem
depth of orchestration
themes move in and out
predominance shifts
transition from here
general ominousness
hallucinated vision
nightmare
focus shift
outer disintegration
russia
post war Europe
unity
inclusive consciousness
work of art
organisation
musical