If There Were Only Water: Water Symbolism in The Waste Land
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.18485/kis.2022.54.176.11Keywords:
The Waste Land, T. S. Eliot, Modernism, myth/religion/philosophy, sexuality/gender, katabasis/nekyiaAbstract
This paper seeks to interpret the fundamental Modernist poem The Waste Land by T. S. Eliot through a set of ideas existing in and arguably creating Modernism as it is known – the mythology of water as the fundamental but fickle fluid Other, subsisting at the basic level of the world and giving life to it while constantly needing to be controlled and tamed by a superior civilizing force – usually masculine – colonizing and taming the unruly savage. This mythology of water has at its core the story of katabasis/nekyia, a symbolic night journey over water deriving from ancient imaginaries, leading into Hell and back. The journey begins with exile from the rational, stable civilized world, and descent into the irrational, chaotic, watery depths of the unconscious and prime matter. In this underwater Hades or Hell, the hero is confronted with the watery beast that is the basis of carnal life at whose hands he suffers a symbolic death, which leads to a rebirth. The beast is often a guardian of precious life-giving treasure, and the victorious hero is allowed to take the spoils with him back to the surface.
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