How is "The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" a Modernist
poem?
T.S. Eliot’s “The Love Song of J. Alfred
Prufrock” -- commonly referred to simply as “Prufrock” -- marked a monumental
literary shift between 19th-century Romantic poetry, and 20th-century Modern
poetry. Many of the poem’s most relevant characteristics indicate the ways in
which Eliot was resisting the Romantic tradition. In considering how “Prufrock”
is a representative example of literary modernism, it is necessary to consider
the poetic aspects of literary Romanticism that Eliot was resisting.
"Make It New"
A theme of
modernist writers, the concept of “making it new” called for poets like Eliot
to abandon, if not challenge, various poetic stylings of the Romantic period.
This can be seen in the free verse of “Prufrock,” as well as its use of stream
of consciousness, a writing technique popularized by modernist writers such as
James Joyce and Virginia Woolf. These techniques were designed to make the
experience of reading “Prufrock” a much different experience than reading
earlier, more structured poems such as Samuel Taylor Coleridge’s Romantic-era
poem “Rime of the Ancient Mariner.”
Move Toward Universality
Another key feature
of modernist poetry exemplified in “Prufrock” is its move from individual to
universal experience. While Romantics such as John Keats or Percy Bysshe
Shelley dwelled on their own experiences of beauty in the natural world,
Eliot’s titular character’s musings are meant to be read as both personal and
shared. J. Alfred Prufrock is a representative example of an urban man
attempting to make sense of the world around him. As such, Eliot’s poem enacts
a move toward considering modernist poetry a way for understanding the world
around us, not simply a way for reflecting on our unique experiences.
Confronting the Modern World
In his
stream-of-consciousness musings on the world around him, Prufrock continually
confronts aspects of the modern world. In the opening line, he encounters
“half-deserted streets” and “one-night cheap hotels.” These aspects of life are
a far cry from the elements of nature obsessed over by pre-modern Romantic
poets. Eliot’s poetry considers life in an urban setting in which the hustle
and bustle of city life are significant experiences, while a Romantic such as
Wordsworth’s poetry considers life in a rural setting in which expansive fields
of daffodils are the things immediately experienced...................................................................................................................................................
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