Romantic Scepticism and the Descent into Nihilism in T.S. Eliot’s ‘Burnt Norton’
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Date
2017
Authors
Francesca Cauchi
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Taylor and Francis Ltd. maney@maney.co.uk
Open Access Color
Green Open Access
Yes
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Publicly Funded
No
Abstract
The nihilism consequent upon the First World War and which T.S. Eliot’s Four Quartets sought in some measure to dispel emerges in ‘Burnt Norton’ as the chilling culmination of a putatively redemptive idealism. In common with his Romantic forebears Wordsworth and Coleridge in particular the ambivalent narrator of Eliot’s first quartet harbours a desire to transcend the limits of temporality through the positing of an ideal world that he suspects may be illusory. The result is a descent into nihilism as extreme as it is absolute: a nihilism which Nietzsche fifty years earlier had decried as a ‘will to nothingness.’ © 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Keywords
Friedrich Nietzsche, Idealism, Nihilism, Romanticism, Scepticism, William Wordsworth, ‘burnt Norton’ T.s. Eliot, Nihilism, William Wordsworth, ‘Burnt Norton,’ T.S. Eliot, Idealism, Romanticism, undefinedBurnt Nortonundefined, T.S. Eliot, Scepticism, Friedrich Nietzsche
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WoS Q
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OpenCitations Citation Count
N/A
Source
Journal of Language, Literature and Culture
Volume
64
Issue
1
Start Page
62
End Page
77
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Scopus : 0
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