How does Eliot's 'The Waste Land' reflect the disorder and decay of modern civilization?
The question is good, even though I'm not sure that I would say that Eliot's long poem indeed deals with "the disorder and decay of modern civilization." Eliot doesn't seem to me particularly concerned with morality (which is what I thnk of, perhaps wrongly, when I hear the phrase "disorder...
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and decay"). Rather, I might go with the terms used in the themes section of the enotes study guide forThe Waste Land: Disillusionment and Restoration (or rebirth). The poem's images develop these two central themes. Characters in the poem engage in joyless sex, the ground is not fertile and nothing grows, etc.
The text of the poem, too, may certainly appear to be in complete disorder. Song lyrics (from high- and low-brow songs) are presented alongside references to printed texts from high and popular culture (there's even at least one refernce to the novel Dracula, see the third length below). The textual fragments that make up the poem -- "These fragments I have shored up against my ruin," says the speaker in the poem -- reflect a fragmented, post-WWI society.
How does Eliot present modern man's predicament in The Waste Land?
World War I had a huge impact on people. We tend to forget about how devastating that war was because of the greater horrors of World War II. Before WWI, mass destruction of people and property just was not possible. With the "advances" made in weaponry during the war, it became possible to kill an entire battalion of soldiers with one canister of mustard gas or one volley of air fire.
Poets like Eliot became very disillusioned and despaired for the future. For him, the world had become like a waste land. What could anyone hope for in a world in which life is valued so little? The eNotes study guide tells us that "Eliot was rebelling against the tendency to glorify the past. He wanted to demonstrate that the past was gritty and real, especially the recent past events of World War I. By demythologizing the events of the past, Eliot forces his readers to focus on the grim realities of his postwar present."
The poem is difficult to interpret, but Ryan Pouquette notes that
the reader needs to be disoriented. Society has become too stale and exists in a state of living death, where crowds of these walking dead file off to work, exhaling “Sighs, short and infrequent.” Even the sighs of despair and disillusionment are “infrequent,” because this society is lost and does not even have the energy to sigh. Eliot is attempting to shake up society and get people to, as he notes during the second section, through the mouthpiece of the rich woman: “Think.”