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    T. S. ELIOT SO C lET Y

    NEWS & NOTESNumber 22 Spring 1994

    Published by the T.S. Eliot Society (incorpor ated in the State ofMissouri as a literary non-profit organization), 5007 Waterman Boulevard, Saint Louis, Missouri 6310

    AMERICAN LITERATURE ASSOCIATIONSAN DIEGO 1994The T.S. Eliot Society will again parti cipate in the annualconference of the American Literature Association (ALA) which

    will run from Friday June 2 through Sunday, June 5 atthe BahiaResort Hotel inSan Diego. This year's Eliot session will be chairedby the President of the Society, Vinni Marie D'Ambrosio andincludes presentations byJo-AnneCappeluti (Fullerton,CA); "Between Tw o Worlds: T.S. Ellors Lyric Narrative/' and Ruth Z.Tempie (CUNY Graduate Center), "The Desire and Pursuit of theWhole.'"The ALA is a coalition of approximately forty Americanauthorsocieties. It has beensponsoringan annualconference since1990. Members of participating author societies are automaticallymembers of ALA and are entitled to attend its conference. Thex:eg.tstration tee this year is $35 ($10 for retired ~ r s o n s , i n d e p e n ~ dent schoiars, and graduate students), and shoUld be sent ALAc/ o Alfred.Bendixen, ExecutiveDirector, CalifomiaState U n v e r s i ~ 5151 State University Drive, Los Angeles, CA 90032-8110. Fo ;reservations ($77 single, $82 double ) call the Bahia Resort Hotei 0-800-288-6770) in San Diego.ANNUAL SOCIETY MEETINGLAST CALL FOR SEPTEMBER PAPERS

    The fifteenth annual meet ing of the T.S. Eliot Society beginson FridaySeptember23 and continues through SundaySeptember25. Once again most of the activities will take place attheDrury Innat Union Station in St. Louis (314-231-3900). The Board is nowissuing its final call for papers, the proposais for which shouid besentbyJunel0to VinniMarieD'Ambrosio, 11 Fifth Avenue NewYork, NY 10003. Papers shouid not have been published previouslyand should take no more than 20 minutes to read. The Boardalso welcomes recommendations for session topiCS and for otheractivities at the annual meeting.The September 1993 meeting featured Christopher Ricks'M 7 ~ o r i a l Lecture, " ~ a r l y Eliot" (a discussion of his forthcomingedItion of the poems In the Berg Collection);Larry Melton's soundand-imageshow, "Ragtimein the Age ofEliot ; Mildred BoazandGuy Hargrove's presentation, "Wagner, Shakespeare, and Mrs.Porter: AnlnterartStudyofMusicandT.S. Eliot'sThe Wasle Land'"and papers by various members of the Society - Sumana S e n ~ Bagchee, ''The Poet and the Sleuth: T. S. Ellot and RaymondChandler:' Virnala C. Rao, "Murderand Mayhem in Ellot'sPlays NJoon-Soo Bong, ''Reading .Eliot's Notes on The Waste Land/' an'dVirginia Phelan, "Sweet Surrender to Julia's Silk: Costume an dConceit in The Cocktail Party. II The Conference also included anOpen ForumofSocie ty Members on Friday evening, a reception atthe home of Anthony and Melanie Fathman on Saturday eveningan d Rev. Earl K. Holt Ill's annual address at the First U n i t a r i a ~ Church on Sunday morning.A complete programof the 1994 annua Imeeting wili appearin the summer issue of News & Notes.

    ANNUAL STUDENT ESSAY CONTESTThe T.S. Eliot Society recentiy inaug urated an annual essacontestforthebestgraduatestudentessayonEliot Thecontestwacona:ived and sponsored by Dr. Anthony and Melanie Fathman

    l o ~ g t i m e ;;ociety members ~ n d hosts of its annual banquet. Thwmnerwillbe awarded a pnze of$500 plus a subvention for travexpenses to the annual meeting in St. Louis.This year's contest has been pubiicized by a fiyer, designed bsociety member Chuck Crispin. The fiyer was included in the Fa1993News& Noles an d also mailed toallgraduateinstitutions in thUnited States an d Canada. Thecompetition isopen toall graduatstudents of English and related areas of study. Essays should bapproximately 3000-5000 words long and focus on some toprefuted to Four Quarlels. The deadline for submission to Vinnj'arie D'Ambrosio isJune 1, an d the winnerwillbe notified by Jul

    THE FUTURE OF EUOT STUDIESA CALL FOR HELPT.S. Eliot will be one of seventeen American author s featuredin a forthcoming volume, Prospecls for the Study ofAmerican Lileralure: A Guide for Fulure Research. The book is designed to describ

    ~ h e current stat e ,of s c h o ! a r s ~ i p on major American authors, tmdicate the archlval, edltonaf, and biographical work stili to bdone, and to sugges t possibilities for future historical and criticstudy. Edited by Richard Kopley (Penn State University), a welknown Poe scholar, Prospecls is scheduled for publication in 199by New York University Press.One of the largest stumbling blocks to new researchon Eliot ~ ~ e prevalent be1ie"f that there is nothing to bedone, either becausIt. s been done already or because le&ll restrictions make it impoSlble to do. Although it is difficuit to deny thatsuch probiems exisEliot scholars recognlZe that there is still much which lies aheadThe. ~ r o s p e c t s volume. provides an opportunity to suggest taspmng as wellas established scholarssomepossible directions fofuture research.The editor of News & Notes, who has been invited to comp?sthe Eliot section, is seeking infonnation and advice from othemembers ofthaSociety. Hedoesnotwishtoscoopyourpetprojeche is SImply asking for suggestions that would help him announcto the scholarly community that the study ofEliof has a future anforecast what that future might look like- Please send your comm ~ n t ~ to S a n ~ o r d Schwartz, Department of English, 22 BurroweBUlldmg, Umversity Park PA 16802 (814-863-3069; Fax 814-8637285). Also indicate whether you think that the Society shouldevote some space in its ow n newslett er to discussionof the futurof Eliot scholarship.

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    BOOK REVIEWSIn the previous issue, News & Notes began to run brief reviews ofnew publications related to Eliot. The review column is open to anymember of the Society. If you are interested in reviewing a newpublication, please contact the editor, Sanford Schwartz, Departmentof English, 22 Burrowes Building, University Park PA 16802 (814-863-3069; Fax814-863-7285). In fairness to all members of the Society,the assignment of reviews will operate on a first come/first served

    basis, though every effort v.j.ll be made to distribute assignments aswidely as possible among the membership. The reviews should beapproximately 500 words in length; they may be descriptive andanalyticalbutnotopeniyjudgmentaL Theaim is to provide membersof tlie Society with a sufficiently ample description of the book todecide whether or not they wish to read it.Laura Elizabeth Niesen de Abruiia The Refining Fire,Herak/es and Other Heroes in T. S. Eliot's Works, Ne wYork: Peter Lang, 1992. xiv +190 pp . $35.95.

    Herakles in Greek mythology was the man/god, indefatigablein his labors, physically overwhelining in battle,and Olympian in hisappetites. In Greek drama, particularly in the plays of EUripides,Herakles was changed from the loutish and comical strongman intothe ideal hero wh o suffered and sacrificed for his friends and thecommon good. I t is the central idea of The Refining Fire that Eliotrecognized in the transformed Herakles myth a model fora Christianhero to the twentieth century. Eliot sought a hero able to sufferandsacrifice to achieve "illuminationi.' and to benefit the community. Healso sought a hero within the cultural tradition of arete, the Creekconcept of "physical courage, endurance, and energy, and above allsuccess," attributes which Eliot felt were still powefful influences incontemporary society.Niesen de Abrufia resolves Eliot's heroes and saints into fourdistinct phases, starting with his early poetry an d ending with FourQ : ! Z ; t e t ~ and the J?lay:;. In the Hrst phass, majcrfigures in the poetryare about as far tram the Herakles model as is possible. Characterssuch as Prufrock, Gerontion, an d the Fisher King are defined bynegatives - inheroic, indecisive, sexually impotent and spirituallyunenlightened. The main second phase figure is ''Sweeney,'' whopossesses certain positive characteristics, such as physical strength,but lacks spiritual sensei which prevents his showing any real conwcern for others. Despite some satirical insights, Sweeney is anisolated figure living a death-in-life existence without possibility ofillumination or creative action. Occupying E U o ~ s third level of hesacrificed heroareShakespeare'5 Anthony,rusCoriolanus,and Virgil'sAeneas. All were for Eliot positive and creative figures destroyed byflaws in their own characters, thus unfit to be Heraklean models orChristian heroes.The Herakles motif comes to full fruition in Niesende Abrufia'sfourth phase, especially in The Cocktail Party! the centerpiece of heranalysis. Behind E l i o ~ 5 writing of this play is his readingo fEuripides'Alcestis in which Herakles throws off his comic and drunken c h a r a c ~ terand perfonns the heroicand selfless actionof wrestling with Deathto rescue Alcestis, the wife of his friend, from the grave. In TheCocktail Party, aspects olthe Heraklean hero are divided between twopeople,SirHenryHarcourt-Reiily, the doctor psychiatrist who savesthe dyingmarriage of two characters in the play,and Celia Coplestone,who in suffering martyrdom by crucifixion in a foreign land, p e r ~ fonns a Heraklean "saving sacrifice" and thus becomes Eliot's c o m ~ plete Christian hero.Eliot's meticulous attention to the sources he reworked is emulated by Niesen de Abrufia in her meticulous analysis of Eliot'smethods of achieving his transformation. Through the many scholarly allusions and points of discussion in her work, she proVides theopportunity to approach E l i o ~ s writings, especially his later poetryand his plays, with fresh insightsand newunderstanding. Thisstudyalso serves to motivate the reader to seek out and reaa or perhapsreread the many other sources mentioned in the text and cited in thebibliography.

    F. X. RobertsUniversity of Northern Colorado

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    Ted Hughes, A Dancer to God: Tributes to T. S.Eliot, New York: Farrar Straus Giroux, 1993. 54pp . $16.00Ted Hughes's book, published originally in Engiand byFaberin 1992,prints three occasionaltributes toT. S. Eliot, whomthe author sees as having given a name and a voice to the"desacralized 1 a n d s c a ~ / of the modem world - a voice that we

    "almost immediately' recognized as our own. The first tributeconsists of Hughes's remarks on unveiling a plaque to Eliot onthe wall of 3 Kensington Court Gardens, where Eliot last lived(26September 1986); the seoond,an introduction to a readingofThe Waste Land (25September1988); the third, a toast to Eliot anabbreviated vernlon of which Hughes gave at the c e n t e n ~ r y dinner hosted by Valerie Eliot (26 September 1988). The firstsection, entitled "The TrulyGreat/' positions Eliotas lithegrandmaster ..of all the poetries of the modern world," his culminating triumph being Four Quartets. The second secrion "The Songof Songs in the Valley of Bones," aims at defining t h ~ place andnature of The Waste LAnd, a musical "ritualof death andrebirth IIin which the repeated final blessing, "Shantih," contains "all theanguished voices of the poem." His longer and more analyticaltitle piece, far too complex and subtle fur adequate treatmenthere, sums Eliot's placeas "notmerely agreatpoet,but a poetwho stands m Enghsh with maybe only one other name; apoet .of an utterly new s ~ i e s . " Infonning this allusion toShakespeare s more thana decade'swork that the Poet Laureatespentbringing forth Shakespeareand the GoddessofCcmplete Being(1992).While all three pieces are tributes to Eliot's art, each a t ~ tempts to assess his oontribution to English literature and worldletters in light of his centennial, which invited long views andoverall critical assessments. In his title piece, Hughes seesWilliam Butler Yeats as another incomparable poet representing "a culmination of specific poetic traditions, the complexautochthonous t r a d i t i o ~ s in these islands.1t But Hughes valuesEliot not just as the poet of the British Isles, bu t as "the prophetof a new world .. which has already, in its soul, and throughoutall Its peoples, suffered the global holocaust, and must now,somehow, find in its ow nashes the spiritual strength to resurrectItself." In short, each of these poets has a unique role intwentieth-century poetry, but Ellot's role Is globaL

    Hughes is specific in pinpointing, for example , "The Deathof Saint Narcissus," an early poem which he quotes in itsentirely, as an instance of the voice of Eliot's shamanistic per-sona tliatevolves throughout his oeuvre. "The finaldrama ofhisdecision to reject the world publicly and becomea dancer to God(completing the life-plan laid down in 'The Death of SaintNarcissus') rises through the parable of Murder in the Cathedralto the rose-window, many-petalled choreography of the dancebefore God in an English chapel, which is the pattern of FourQuartets."These tributes are more than tributes: they characterizeandparticularize.Joan Filimore HookerNew York University

    BOOKS RECEIVEDIf you are interested in reviewing any of these books for News& Notes, p l e ~ s e contact the editor, Sanford Schwartz, Department of English, 22 Burrowes Building, University Park P A16802 (814-863-3069; Fax 814-863-7285).

    J. A. Richardson, Falling Towers: The Trojan Imagination inThe Waste lAnd, The Dunaad,and Speke Parott. Newark: University of Delaware Press. 1992.Vinod Sena and Rajiva Verma (eds.), The Fire and the Rose:New Essays on T. S. Eliot. Dehli: Oxford Univer sity Press. 1992.

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    BOOKS, MONOGRAPHS ON EliOT 1987-1994The following is a list of books an d monographs devoted partially orentirely to Eliot for the years 1987 to the present.

    Alidritt, Keith. Modernism in the Second World War: The LaterPoetryalEzra Pound, T. S. Eliot, Basil Bunting and HughMacDiarmid. NewYork,Peter Lang. 1989. 121 pp.Alvarado Tenorio, Harold. La poesia de T. S. Eliot. Bogota, CentroColombo Americana, 1988. 185 pp.Asbee, Sue. T.S. Eliot. Have, Wayland,1990.Asher, Kenneth George. T. S. Eliot and Ideology. Cambridge, Ne wYork, Cambridge University Press, 1994.Bagchee,Shyam ai (editor). T. S. Eliot,a Voice Descanting: CentenaryEssays. Basingstoke, Macmillan, 1990. x.i:iL 294pp.Barfoot, c.c. an d Theo D'haen (editors). CentenniRl Hauntings:Pope, Byron and Eliot in the Year 88. Atlanta, Georgia, Rodopi, 1990.

    366 Ptnatt , Daniel. Shifting Eliot: Chapters from an Unpublished Book.Great Britain, Bynmill, 1987. 45 pp.Basu, Tapan Kumar (editor). T. S. Eliot: An Anthology of RecentCriticism. Delhi, Pencraft International, 1993. 237 pp.Beehler, Michael. T. S. Eliot, Wallace Stevens, and the Discourses ofDifference. Baton Rouge, LouisianaState University Press, 1987. 182 pp.Bergonzi, Bernard (editor). T. S. Eliot, Four Quartets: A Casebook.Basingstoke, Macmillan, 1991. 269 pp .Bemabo, Antonella. La Presenzadi Shakespeare in T. S. Eliote ,. Joyce.Pisa, ETS, 1992. 129 pp.

    Berry, S. L. T. S. Eliot. Mankato[Minn.!, Creative Education, 1993.Bloom, Harold (editor). T. S. Eliot's Murder in the Cethedral. Ne wYork, Gelsea House, 1988. 150 pp .Bronzewaer, W. J. M. T. S. Eliot: Een Amerikaan in Europa. Baam,Ambo, 1988. 179 pp .Brooker, jewel Spears. Mastery and Escape: T.S. Eliot and theDialectic of Modernism. Amherst, University of Massachusetts Press,1994.Brooker, jewel Spears (editor). Approaches to Teaching Eliot. Ne wYork, MLA, 1988. xii,203 pp.Brooker, jewel Spears (editor).The PlacingofT. S. Eliot. Columbia,Unive..'tiity of Missouri Fress, 1991. viii, 204 pp.Brooker, jewelSpearsandjoseph Bentley. Reading the Waste lAnd:Modernism and the Limits of Interpretation. Amherst, University ofMassach usetts Press, 1990. xii, 239 pp .Brooks, Harold Fletcher. T. S. Eliot as Literary Critic. London,Woolf,1987. 160 pp.Brown, Dennis. Intertextual Dynamics within the Literary Group:Joyce, Lewis, Pound and Eliot, the Men of 1914. Basingstoke, Maanillan,1990. x, 227 pp.Bush, Ronald (edHor). T. S. Eliot: The Modernist in History. Cambridge [England!; New York, Cambridge University Press, 1991. x,210pp. Calder,Angus. T. S. Eliot. Brighton,Sussex, HarvesterPress, 1987.ix, 182 pp.Calimani, Dario. T. S. Eliot: 10 spazio retorico. Rama, Caruccieditore, 1988. 240 pp.Chatterjee, Sati. r.s. Eliot: Encounters with Reality. Calcutta,Papyrus. 1990.Chellappan, K. Tagore, Bharathi, and T. S. Eliot: Towards CreativeUnity. Annamalainagar, Annamalai University , 1987. vi, 125 pp .Oarke, Graham (editor). T. S. Eliot: Critical Assessments. London,Christopher Helm , 1990. 4 v. Conte nts: v. 1. Memories, interviews,contemporary responses - v. 2. Early poems an d the Waste land - v.3. Ash-Wednesday, Four Quartets an d the drama - v. 4. The criticisman d general essays.

    Cookson, Unda and Bryan Loughrey (editors). Critical Essays onThe Waste Land. Harlow, Longman, 1988. 155 pp .Cookson, William an d Peter Dale (editors). T. S. Eliot. ReddingRidge [etJ, Black Swan Books, 1988.Cooper , John Xiros. T. S. Eliot and the Politics ofVoice: The Argumentof The Waste lAnd. Ann Arbor, Michigan, UMI Research Pr ess, 1987. x,121 pp.Cowan, Laura (editor, with an introduction by). T. S. Eliot: Manand Poet. Otonto, Maine, National Poetry Foundation, University ofMaine , 1990-1992. 2v. Voltune 2 has special title: An Annotated Bibliography of a Decade ofT. S. Eliot Criticism, 1977-1986. Volume 2 compiledan d edited by Sebastian D. G. Knowles an d ScottA. Leonard.Crane, David. On Eliot's Four Quartets. Durham, Ne w CenturyPress, 1987. 150 pp.

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    Crawford, Robert. The Savage and the City in the Work of T. S. Eliot.Oxford. aarendon Press;NewYork, Oxford University Press, 1987. xii,2S1pp. Cuddy, Lois A an d David H. Hirsch (editors). Critical Essays on T. S.Eliot's The Waste lAnd. Boston, G. K. Hal l, 1991. ix, 288 ppDale, Alzina Stone. T. S. Eliot: The Philosopher Poet. -Wheaton, m., H.Shaw, 1988. 209 pp.D'Ambrosio, Vinni Marie. Eliot Possessed: T. S. Eliot and fitzGerald'sRubaiyat. Ne w York, Ne w York University Press, 1989. x,244 pp .

    Danzer, Ina Dorothea. T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, und tier fram:.osischeSymbolismus. Heidelburg: C. Winter. 1992.Davies, Toni an d Nigel Wood (editors). The Waste Land. Philadelphia,Open Univer.rity Press, 1994.Deniers, Oaudia. Die Darstellung des Alters im Werk T. S. Eliots: EinLiteraturwissenschaftlicher Beitrag zur Gerontologie. Frankfurt am Main,NewYork, Peter Lang. 1993. 193 pp .Deo, S. S. T. S. Eliot: Philosophical Themes in Drama. Delhi, AmarPrakashan, 1987. xii, 213 pp .Dickens, David Bruce. Negative Spring: Crisis Imagery in the Works oBrentano, Lenau,Rilke,ll1ld T. S. Eliot. NewYork,PeterLang. 1989. xi,242pp.Domenichelli, Mario an d Romana Zacchi (editors). The Spectre Of aRose: Intersections: Seminario Eliotiano, Cagliari,5-6aprile 1989. Roma, Bulzoni,1991. 296 pp .Dwlvedi, Amar Nath. Papers on T. S. Eliot. Delhi, Amar Prakashan,1990. viii,194pp.Eliot, Valerie (editor). The Letters of T. S. Eliot. Vol 1, 1898-1922. SanDiego, Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1988.Ellis, Steve. The English Eliot: Design, Language and Landscape in FourQuart.ts. London, Ne w York,Routledge, 1991. x,187pp.Ellman, Maud. The Poetics of Impersonality: T. S. Eliot and Ezra Pound.Brighton, Harvester Press, 1987. xvi, 207 pp.Evans, Giles. WishwoodRevisited: ANew InterpretationofT. S. Eliot's TheFamily Reunion. Lewes, Book Guild, 1991. 140 pp .Fleissner, Robert F. Ascending the Prufrockian Stair: Studies in a- Dissociated Sensibuity. Ne w York, Peter Lang. 1988. xxiv, 224pp .Fleissner, Robert F. T. S. Eliot and the Heritage ofAfrica: The Mlgus Il1ldthe Moor as Metaphor. Ne w York, Peter Lang. 1992 xiii, 255 pp .Fleissner, Robert F. T. S. Eliot and RAce: A Compilation OfFeature Storiesand Letters in the lAndon Times (August 1988), The Eliot Centennial, withResponses in England and the New York Times. 1988. unpaged.Gish, Nancy K the Waste Lind: A Poem ofMemory and Desire. Boston,Twayne,1988. xi, 127 pp.Goldwasser. T. S. Eliot. Glenn Horowitz Bookseller, 1989.Gordon, Lyndall. Eliot's New Life. New York, Farrar Straus Giroux1988. x, 356 pp .

    Guido, Maria Grazia. nLinguaggio Drammatico di T. S. Eliot. Galatina,Congedo, 1992. 275 pp .Hanief, Mohammad. Seven Essays on T. S. Eliot. Calcutta, WritersWorkshop, 1987. 89 pp .Hanief, Mohammad. The Theory and Practice ofCriticism in T. S. Eliot.Calcutta, Indi",Writer's Workshop, 1989.Hinchliffe,Arnold P. The Waste lAndandAsh Wednesday. Basingstoke,Macmillan, 1987. 87 pp.Hirst, Desiree. Brodie's Notes on T. S. Eliot's Selected Poems. New ed.London, 1991. 55 pp .Honda, Kinichiro. T. S. Eriotto Kenkyu Josetsu. Tokyo,ShmzakiShorin,1990.Hughes, Brian. Luis Cernuda and the Modern English Poets: A Study othe Influence of Browning, Yeats, and Eliot on His Poetry. Alicante [Spain].Universidad de Alicante, 1988. 211 pp .Hughes, Ted. T. S. Eliot: ATribut.. London, Faber an d Faber, 1987. 13pp. Hughes, Ted. A Dancer to God: Tributes to T. S. Eliot. London, Faber an dFaber, 1992. 54 pp .Jam, Manju. A Critical Reading of the Selected Poems ofT. S. Eliot.

    Delhi,. Ne w York, Oxford University Press, 1991. 258 pp.Jain, Manju. T. S. Eliot and American Philosophy: The Harvard Years.Cambridge [England!; Ne w York, Cambridge University Press, 1992.xvili, 345 pp.}ha, Akhileshwar. Oriental Influences in T. S. Eliot. Allahabad, KitabMahal , 1988. iii, ii, 280 pp .jha,Akhileshwar. ThePoetryofT.S.Eliot: AnX-RayoftheModern World.Delhi, Chanakya Publications, 1989.Junkes-Kirchen, Klaus. T. S. Eliots The Waste LAnd Deutsch: Theorie undPraxiseinerGedichtubersetzungnachliteraturundubersetzungswissenschaftlichenGesichtspunkten. Frankfort am Main, Ne w York, Peter Lang. 1988. 303 pp.Karl, DavenMichael. T.S. E liot's DramaticPilgrimage: AProgress in Craftas an Expresion ofChristian Perspective. Lewistown [N.Y.], E. Mellen, 1990.Kearns, Oe o McNelly. T. S. Eliot and Indic Traditions: A Study in Poetryand Belief. Cambridge {England]; Ne w York, Cambridge University Press,.1987. xvili, 286 pp .

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    Kim,Dal-Yong. Puritan. Sensibility in T. S. Eliot's Poetry. New York,Peter Lang, 1993.Kinney, Clare Regan. Strategies of Poetic Narrative: Chaucer, Spenser,MilUm, Eliot. Cambridge [England], Ne w York, Cambridge UniversityPress , 1992. 261 pp.Kisner, Made1eineand John H. Morgan (editors). Celebrating T. S. Eliot:On the Centennial ofHis Birth. Bristol,Wyndham Hall Press, 1988. xi, 273 pp .Koshizawa, Yutaka. T. S. Eriotto to Eibungaku. Tokyo, Keiso Shobo,1988. iv, 383 pp .Leeming, Glenda. P o e t i c D r ~ m a . Basingstoke, Maanillan, 1989. ix, 220

    pp . Lentricchia, Frank . Modernist Quartet. Cambridge, Ne w York, Cambridge University Press, 1994.Lobb, Edward (editor). Words in Time, New Essays on Eliot's FourQuartets. Ann Arbor, University of Michi gan Press, 1993. xvii, 210pp .Longenbach, James. Modernist Poetics of Histmy; Pound, Eliot and theSense of the Past. Princeton,New Jersey, Princeton University Press, 1987.xviii, 279 pp .Luke, Helen M. Old Age. Ne w York, Parabola Books, 1987. x, 112 pp .Magoon, Joseph. T. S. Eliot: A Bibliography of Writings about T. S. Eliotfor the Years 1970 to 1987. Bournemouth, J. Magoon, 1989. 95 pp .Malamud,Randy. T.S.Eliot'sDmma:aResearchandProductionSourcebook.NewYork,GreenwoodPress,1992. xii,314pp.Manganaro, Marc. Myth, Rhetoric,and the Voicnses toT. S. Eliot: A Birth Centenary TnDute. Varanasi, VishwavidyalayaPraksshan,1989. iii, 72 pp.Stead, C. K. Pound, Yeats, Eliot and the Modernist Movement.Baslngstoke, Macmillan, 1986. vii, 393 pp .Stead, C. K. The New Poetic: Yeats to Eliot. Rev. ed. Philadelphia,University of Pennsylvania Press,1987. 201 pp.Sultan, Stanley. Eliot, Joyce and Company. New York, OxfordUniversity Press, 1987. xiv, 326 pp.Surette, Leon. The Birth of Modernism: Ezra Pound, T. S. Eliot, W. B.Yeats and the Occult. Montreal, Mc Gill-Queen's University Press, 1993.xi,320pp.Svarny, Erik. 'The Men of 1914': T. S. Eliot and Early Modernism.Philadelphia, Open University Press, 1988. 268 pp .Takacs, T. T. S. Eliot and the lAnguage of Poetry. Publication ofAkademiai Kiado, Hungary, 1989.Tamplin, Ronald. A Preface to T. S. Eliot. Ne w York, London,Longman, 1988. xli, 195pp .Tikoo, S. K. TheMystery in the Plays ofT. S. Eliot. Ne w York, AdventBooks, 1989.Tokunaga,Shozo. T. S. Eriotto. Tokyo, ShimizuShoin, 1992.Tomlin, Eric Walter Fredrick. T. S. Eliot: A Friendship. London,Routledge, 1988. 241 pp.Vaidya, Sarojini (editor). Ti. Es. Eliyata ani Marathi navakauya vasamilsha. Mumbai, Mumbai Vidyapitha, Marathi Vaibhaga- 1992. 106pp . Valentine, Susie S. Matthew Arnold and T. S. Eliot as Social Critics.Madras, Emerald, 1987. 69 pp .Warren, Charles. T. S. Eliot on Shakespeare. Artn Arbor, Michigan,UMI Research Press, 1987. 139 pp.Williams, GeoffreyBernard. TheReason ina Stonn: AStudyoftheUseof Ambiguity in the Writings of T. S. Eliot. Lanham, University Press ofAmerica,1991. xiv, 268 pp.Yi,Chang-bae. T. S. Ellio/yongu: ingankwamunhak. Soul,Minumsa,1988. 457 pp .Yi, Chun-hak. Si ui chonggyohak: T. S. Eliot ui si wa siguk. SoulTukjJyolsi, Hansil, 1992. 371 pp .