What am I?
Definitions
Influences
How does this function?
Define
100

A short, introductory piece of music that precedes a larger or more complex work. It sets the mood, establishes the key, or warms up the instruments for the main performance.

A prelude

100

When one is at the forefront of new and experimental ideas and methods in art, music, or literature, they are?

Avant Garde

100

The poet who influenced TS Eliot's engagement with the flaneur. 

Charles Baudelaire

100

How does counterpoint function in Eliot's poetry?

When a composer writes a piece of music using voices that follow different rhythms or pitches but ultimately come together harmonically, she/he uses counterpoint. (Eliot uses counterpoint to bring his poems to a final harmonic balance.)

100

Define Ennui:

a

200

When a person is lacking in mental or physical action or productivity, with relation to religious belief.

Spiritual Vacuity

200

Anything so weird it doesn't seem real, featuring wild and shifting images, or patterns that are continually moving and changing.

Phantasmagoric

200

The composer who explores avant garde strangeness and dreamlike dissonance and wildness in his ‘Rhapsodie’ for Saxophone and Piano.

Achille-Claude Debussy

200

How does bathos function in Eliot's poetry?

When he sudden, often comical transition from a serious, elevated, or emotional tone to something trivial, mundane, or silly.

200

Define melancholy:

A feeling of pensive sadness, typically with no obvious cause.

300

When a person wrestles with the big questions involving the meaning of life.

An Existential crisis

300

What is a system of thought that says that there are no principles or beliefs that have any meaning or can be true, most commonly pertaining to political and religious organisations.

Nihilism

300

A movement in the early-to-mid 20th-century which was born out of rapid industrialisation and the trauma ofWWI.

Modernism

300

How does dissonance function in Eliot's poetry? 

Eliot presents a clash of discordant, fragmented, or paradoxical elements—to reflect the spiritual and psychological dislocation of the modern era. e.g. clashing poetic rhythms or mismatched imagery: Shape without form, shade without colour (to discribe a spiritual void in The Hollow Men)

300

Define the two meanings of the word masquerade:

Someone who pretends to be someone they are not they are masquerading as someone else.
When someone attends a social event or gathering wearing costumes and masks.

400

A grand and passionate free-flowing piece of music, featuring a range of highly contrasted moods, colour, and tonality.

A rhapsody

400

The part of philosophy that is about understanding existence, knowledge and the nature of the universe.

Metaphysical

400

The psychoanalyst whose theories on the subconscious, repressed desires, dream interpretation and irrationality influenced Eliot.

Sigmund Freud

400

How does faux naïve realism work in Eliot's poetry?

Eliot subverts the traditional, Romantic lyric with flat, conversational cadences and cynical observations of the metropolis. e.g. The winter evening settles down / With smell of steaks in passageways.

400

Define Quotidian:

Mundane routines and habits

500

What am I if my 'Headpiece (is) filled with straw' and have, 'Shape without form, shade without colour'?

The Hollow Men

500

A rhetorical device in which a speaker deliberately breaks off in the middle of a sentence and leaves it unfinished.

Aposiopesis

500

Which work provided T.S. Eliot with a structural and symbolic framework to express the spiritual emptiness of the modern world?

Dante's 'Inferno' (Eliot mapped the medieval underworld of Hades onto post-WWI Europe, utilising Dante’s imagery of Hell to European cities such as Paris and London.

500

How does objective correlative work in Eliot's poetry?

Eliot presents a set of objects, a specific situation, or a chain of events to evoke an organic emotion in the reader. e.g When the evening is spread out against the sky / Like a patient etherised upon a table..." the reader can feel Prufrock's sense of paralysis and vulnerabilty.

500

Define stream of consciousness:

A literary style in which a character's thoughts, feelings, and reactions are depicted in a continuous flow uninterrupted by conventional links and segues (creates psychological realism)

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