"The Waste Land" - A Game of Chess

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  • Опубліковано 5 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 73

  • @thiagofranciscodasilvapaul5471

    I'm Brazilian and I'm reading T. S. Eliot for the first time. I really enjoyed this video.

  • @thomassimmons1950
    @thomassimmons1950 5 років тому +12

    FANTASTIC...I'm 62 and at last have fallen in love with Eliot. This series has been a great help.
    WELL DONE LAD!

  • @BitchItsMe11
    @BitchItsMe11 7 років тому +30

    I have a modernism exam coming up and this has been insanely helpful. All the allusions and references you explained were fantastic! Thank you so much! Just wanted to add that rats alley is a name for the trenches in WW1, I think maybe the male is having a PTSD experience, hence the inability to communicate. Just wanted to add my 2 cents! But thank you again, most helpful!!

  • @MrsLucyDiamonds
    @MrsLucyDiamonds 6 років тому +16

    I believe that "rat's alley" might be a reference to the WW1 trenches as they were known to be filled by rats probably because of all the corpses stacked.
    Thank you very much for these videos! Truly helpful!!

  • @navaneetha9590
    @navaneetha9590 6 років тому +9

    Acquisition of knowledge is indeed a pleasure in itself .

  • @K_F_fox
    @K_F_fox 3 роки тому +4

    I haven't heard anyone on UA-cam say this, but "why do you never speak to me, speak" is *clearly* a Hamlet reference.

    • @markhughes7927
      @markhughes7927 6 місяців тому +2

      Which conversation? - please. Have a vague feeling that O O O O is also from one of his plays while mapping squarely upon many popular songs.

    • @K_F_fox
      @K_F_fox 6 місяців тому

      @@markhughes7927 O O O O is from a speech by Lady Macbeth.

    • @K_F_fox
      @K_F_fox 6 місяців тому +1

      @@markhughes7927 Here's the smell of the blood still: all the
      perfumes of Arabia will not sweeten this little
      hand. Oh, oh, oh!

    • @K_F_fox
      @K_F_fox 6 місяців тому +1

      @@markhughes7927 the play Hamlet opens with Horatio imploring the ghost of King Hamlet to speak, and the guards also imploring Prince Hamlet to speak to his father. In a very real way the play is about a lack of open and truthful communication and the consequences of toxic deception.

    • @markhughes7927
      @markhughes7927 6 місяців тому

      @@K_F_fox
      Thank you - was thinking it might be there. ‘Toxic deception’ - you may enjoy Hank Whittemore’s last book on the subject publ.2022..

  • @JasonMazzis
    @JasonMazzis 3 роки тому +3

    Mr Huff, you sir are a legend. Thanks for this series.

  • @selectforintellect6092
    @selectforintellect6092 3 роки тому +2

    At last I've found a truly amazing video lecture on British Poetry.

  • @cashelosullivan1272
    @cashelosullivan1272 8 років тому +11

    Fucking excellent so far man. Really enjoying these.

  • @povedon56
    @povedon56 Рік тому +3

    "The hot water at ten" Nothing to do with tea but a hot water bottle that Eliot used to give Vivien(his wife) every night to relieve her migraines. Actually in the first draft Eliot wrote "a hot water bottle at ten" and was Vivien who suggested the change for the final version.

    • @povedon56
      @povedon56 Рік тому

      And I think "the ivory men" rather simbolise a barren marriage, that is, the children that Vivien and Eliot will never bring to the world. Eliot really wanted to have kids but not with Vivien, mentally deranged by then.

  • @priyasukhi8685
    @priyasukhi8685 5 років тому +5

    Thank you Mr Huff. I went through the whole of your wasteland video and every bit of it was appealing.

  • @AuReLiaCloVen
    @AuReLiaCloVen 4 роки тому +3

    The series of The Wasteland analysis is AMAZING and extremely helpful! Thank you for this! 😄

  • @ArthurLWood
    @ArthurLWood Рік тому +1

    The game of chess is possibly also a reference to the chess game Ferdinand plays with Miranda at the end of The Tempest.

  • @jennyoshea1958
    @jennyoshea1958 2 роки тому +2

    Brilliant exploration of The Wasteland. Thank you ☀️🙂☀️

  • @MrAndyCarlos
    @MrAndyCarlos 8 років тому +4

    Because of you I will have a good presentation tomorrow. Thanks a lot, you saved me!

    • @MrHuffsLiteratureClass
      @MrHuffsLiteratureClass  8 років тому +1

      Awesome! Good luck!

    • @MrAndyCarlos
      @MrAndyCarlos 8 років тому

      +Mr. Huff's Literature Class Thanks! Would you mind to tell me how often you put analysis here?

  • @learne_english_AR
    @learne_english_AR 3 роки тому +1

    Sir please continue uploading your mind-blowing lectures.Thanks alot for sharing your knowledge.

  • @animangaweee
    @animangaweee 7 років тому +2

    I was feeling so overwhelmed and this really helped me out!

  • @gopikagopalakrishnan7078
    @gopikagopalakrishnan7078 4 роки тому +1

    Ohh thankyou for this amazing analysis ❤️ I'm taking notes from you. Just finished the part two now.

  • @inassh8685
    @inassh8685 5 років тому +3

    5 minutes into this video....
    SUBSCRIBED!!! 💕

  • @poem647
    @poem647 8 років тому +2

    This is amazing! love your analysis on this poem :D

  • @ulyssesdesiqueira
    @ulyssesdesiqueira 4 роки тому +1

    Thank you. I'm your student now. You made this great work accessible to me
    in some way.
    Please, recommend us some bibliography on literary criticism (not theory, but good criticism). I was looking for F R Leavis books (The Great Tradition), but it was all very expensive. I think Europeans don't like to sell books ... Shipping to Brazil (I'm from here) is absurd ... it would be better in pdf
    .

  • @devikav6702
    @devikav6702 3 роки тому

    I am so Thankful for your efforts. Appreciate it and thank you 😊

  • @sophiasmith6583
    @sophiasmith6583 3 роки тому +1

    This is amazing! Thank you so much! X

  • @bushrahaider4228
    @bushrahaider4228 6 років тому +2

    You'v been a massive savior. Thank you so much.

  • @Kaascat
    @Kaascat 8 років тому +1

    Amazing analysis, again thank you!

  • @sabukthom
    @sabukthom 8 років тому +1

    Thank you Mr. Huff...I teach Waste Land and this video helped a lot..

  • @nymeria2278
    @nymeria2278 8 років тому +1

    Great video! Thanks for sharing this information :)

  • @kshitijjoshi5368
    @kshitijjoshi5368 4 роки тому

    Extremely helpful... Prodigious work..

  • @flowermaidennn
    @flowermaidennn 8 років тому +1

    Amazing work, thank you

  • @bhattacharjee9754
    @bhattacharjee9754 4 роки тому

    Thank you so much. Yoh have done your best.

  • @cloramurphy3838
    @cloramurphy3838 7 років тому

    You are the best tutor on UA-cam.....😄

  • @proteusindomitus5015
    @proteusindomitus5015 8 років тому +1

    correct me if I'm wrong but I don't think Tereus did cut off Philomela's hands..how then could she weave the tapestry depicting the crime which is quite central to the myth..perhaps I'm nitpicking..nonetheless I find the tremendously helpful great job

    • @grainofsand4176
      @grainofsand4176 9 місяців тому

      I think you're right! There may be different versions of the myth as well.
      I think it's Lavinia ~from Shakespeare's play, Titus, who was raped and had both her tongue and hands cut off.
      Philomela had her tongue cut out and became a nightingale. Philomela sings and weaves a tapestry to tell Ovid.
      Thanks for adding to this amazingly informative video!

  • @markhughes7927
    @markhughes7927 6 місяців тому

    37:18
    ..have an unplaced memory that the number 31 has deep sexual significance in psychoanalysis of dreams and perhaps also an esoteric meaning in numerology…and ‘five already..young George’ appears to give zeitgeist for the epoque of George V the 12th year of which regnal period the poem is written in..
    40:51
    There is a truly delightful obverse register of this predicament given in Charles Dicken’s short story ‘The Magic Fishbone’.
    28:04
    ‘..press lidless eyes waiting for the knock upon the door..’ suggests perhaps the marriage vow ‘until death do us part’ and a full stop to this love-lost marriage with a pressing down of the eyelids at the moment of death by one or other of the partners.

  • @gimbutas1
    @gimbutas1 8 років тому

    I have never heard the final "T" pronounced in tarot. It's "tarot" like "pharaoh". The "O" in "demobbed" is just like "mob" not "motivate".

    • @K_F_fox
      @K_F_fox 3 роки тому

      The T is pronounced in *Demotic* French. And "Clairvoyant" rhymes with "croissant" in Demotic French, from what I've heard in dramatic readings including Eliot's.

  • @thepirbaba5007
    @thepirbaba5007 7 років тому

    thank you again.

  • @bilalelhammoumy452
    @bilalelhammoumy452 6 років тому

    What exactly does the notion of fragmentation mean?

  • @imlafonz8047
    @imlafonz8047 2 роки тому +1

    36:42 also her husband’s been gone for 4 years, so if she’s pregnant, that means she had an affair while he was gone

  • @adeelshahzadmalik5632
    @adeelshahzadmalik5632 3 роки тому

    Amazing,,,
    Surely gave me,,,75 score.

  • @saimasultana4532
    @saimasultana4532 4 роки тому

    Very helpful

  • @christopherwallis9218
    @christopherwallis9218 7 років тому +2

    although obviously the poem is talking about elliots view of marriage in general, is the first half largely based on his relationship with his own wife? i always find it hard to read these poems and not feel that they relate to elliots own personal life in some way

  • @sampathjayakody9883
    @sampathjayakody9883 7 років тому

    Thank you very much

  • @suzann5312
    @suzann5312 6 місяців тому

    Now i understand why this is associated with The Great Gatsby

  • @lbrahim1568
    @lbrahim1568 7 років тому

    nice your explanation is really good.I am a teacher but I also want to complete my masters in English and its really hard because I haven't any tutor I need help cause I can't join any academy .I am also interee in this so can anyone help meee

  • @ImkerijBuytendelft
    @ImkerijBuytendelft 8 років тому

    :) nice