“Inside His Idiom:” E. M. Forster’s T. S. Eliot

Counter to previous assumptions, relations between E.M. Forster and T.S. Eliot are important to an understanding of the work of each, and reshape our view of their period. These mutual influence relations also enable revised theories of literary influence to be proposed. The two writers shared privi...

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Main Author: Jason FINCH
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA) 2018-06-01
Series:E-REA
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Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/erea/6214
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author Jason FINCH
author_facet Jason FINCH
author_sort Jason FINCH
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description Counter to previous assumptions, relations between E.M. Forster and T.S. Eliot are important to an understanding of the work of each, and reshape our view of their period. These mutual influence relations also enable revised theories of literary influence to be proposed. The two writers shared privileged upbringings founded on nineteenth-century capitalism. The friendship of each with Virginia Woolf brought them into contact with one another and then, in the 1920s, they were linked by The Criterion, which Eliot edited. The article examines two pieces of prose by Forster on Eliot, one gathered into his first collection of essays, Abinger Harvest (1936) and the other into Two Cheers for Democracy (1951). Over time, Forster came to see Eliot as self-deceiving and harmed by his attachment to conservative Christianity. If Eliot drew on Forster’s work it was early in his career, before The Waste Land. Forster and Eliot can be understood in social terms as mandarins of British culture in the mid-twentieth century. While Eliot seemed to pay little attention to Forster in later years, Forster’s career can be read as shadowed by Eliot’s.
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spelling doaj-art-248bebac32e043dda87903624ab4e29c2025-01-09T12:53:56ZengLaboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)E-REA1638-17182018-06-0115210.4000/erea.6214“Inside His Idiom:” E. M. Forster’s T. S. EliotJason FINCHCounter to previous assumptions, relations between E.M. Forster and T.S. Eliot are important to an understanding of the work of each, and reshape our view of their period. These mutual influence relations also enable revised theories of literary influence to be proposed. The two writers shared privileged upbringings founded on nineteenth-century capitalism. The friendship of each with Virginia Woolf brought them into contact with one another and then, in the 1920s, they were linked by The Criterion, which Eliot edited. The article examines two pieces of prose by Forster on Eliot, one gathered into his first collection of essays, Abinger Harvest (1936) and the other into Two Cheers for Democracy (1951). Over time, Forster came to see Eliot as self-deceiving and harmed by his attachment to conservative Christianity. If Eliot drew on Forster’s work it was early in his career, before The Waste Land. Forster and Eliot can be understood in social terms as mandarins of British culture in the mid-twentieth century. While Eliot seemed to pay little attention to Forster in later years, Forster’s career can be read as shadowed by Eliot’s.https://journals.openedition.org/erea/6214T. S. EliotE. M. Forstermandarinmodernismssecrecyman of letters
spellingShingle Jason FINCH
“Inside His Idiom:” E. M. Forster’s T. S. Eliot
E-REA
T. S. Eliot
E. M. Forster
mandarin
modernisms
secrecy
man of letters
title “Inside His Idiom:” E. M. Forster’s T. S. Eliot
title_full “Inside His Idiom:” E. M. Forster’s T. S. Eliot
title_fullStr “Inside His Idiom:” E. M. Forster’s T. S. Eliot
title_full_unstemmed “Inside His Idiom:” E. M. Forster’s T. S. Eliot
title_short “Inside His Idiom:” E. M. Forster’s T. S. Eliot
title_sort inside his idiom e m forster s t s eliot
topic T. S. Eliot
E. M. Forster
mandarin
modernisms
secrecy
man of letters
url https://journals.openedition.org/erea/6214
work_keys_str_mv AT jasonfinch insidehisidiomemforsterstseliot