Skip to main content
User Image

Ms. Arwa F. Al-Mubaddel أروى فهد المبدل

Lecturer

TA

العلوم اﻹنسانية واﻻجتماعية
Building 1, Floor 3, Office #92
publication
Journal Article
2016

“Writing Women in Eliot’s The Waste Land: Hysteria, Masculinity, and Silence.”

Al-Mubaddel, Arwa . 2016

Facsimile Eliot Pound Femininity Hysteria Misogyny

Considered to be a twentieth-century masterpiece, T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land has been the subject of much scrutiny, especially concerning Ezra Pound’s role in the composition of the poem. Eliot himself affirms the function of Pound as a “co-creator” of the poem, dedicating it to him, while completely dismissing the influence his first wife as his personal editor. Therefore, this research examines Ezra Pound’s drafting and editing of Eliot’s The Waste Land facsimile, revealing their misogynistic attitudes towards what they deemed to be feminine in the text, including the notes and comments of Eliot’s first wife, as well a character named Fresca, who was omitted from the final version of the poem. Further study of the poem’s drafts show the hysterical and disorderly nature of the text, which leads to Pounds masculinization of the poem, which reveals his and Eliot’s anxieties and tensions surrounding women in general, and women writers in particular. 

Publication Work Type
Academic Research
Volume Number
2
Issue Number
3
Pages
618-623
more of publication
publications

Considered to be a twentieth-century masterpiece, T.S. Eliot’s The Waste Land has been the subject of much scrutiny, especially concerning Ezra Pound’s role in the composition of the poem.

by Arwa Al-Mubaddel
2016