Episodes Referencing This Book
February 29, 2024
Context:
Referenced in connection with the Battle of Mylae, with the hosts quoting the line 'Stetson, you who were with me in the ships at Mylae' and discussing why Eliot may have chosen this particular battle as a reference to mass slaughter.
June 29, 2023
Context:
Described as 'probably the single most influential poem written in English of the 20th century' and discussed in relation to the Holy Grail mythology and Jesse Weston's influence on it.
December 29, 2022
Context:
Mentioned as one of the landmark works of 1922 modernism alongside Ulysses. The hosts quote 'these fragments I shored against my ruin' as emblematic of the post-WWI sense that civilization had shattered and all one could do was make collages from the pieces. Discussed as part of the 'great man as artist' paradigm that has since faded.
January 13, 2022
Context:
Discussed as the other landmark literary work of 1922, described as 'the greatest poem in English written in the 20th century,' published in October in The Criterion magazine
December 20, 2021
Context:
Referenced while walking through the City of London, in connection with the hosts' upcoming episode on 1922 as the year modernity was born. They cite Eliot's 'terrifying description' of people crossing London Bridge — 'I had not thought death had undone so many' — drawing a parallel between Eliot's vision of modern London and the atmosphere of the financial district they are walking through.