The Complete Prose of T. S. Eliot
Vol. 6: The War Years, 1940–1946

Ed. David E. Chinitz & Ronald Schuchard

Johns Hopkins University Press

Ebook (ISBN 978-1-4214-0685-5) 2017
Hardback (ISBN 978-1-4214-4106-1) 2021
 

The War Years, 1940–1946 reveals Eliot’s response to the extraordinary pressures of total war. Much of his work of the period was composed under circumstances or for purposes dictated by World War II, and the war remains the grim background for his prose whether he was writing on the ballet, the book trade, Kipling, Poland, or Poe. The latest pieces in the volume bring Eliot to the brink of another global conflict: the Cold War.

The War Years includes over 140 works of prose, from essays, lectures, and radio broadcasts to autobiographical documents, book reviews, newsletters, position papers on ethical and theological questions, public correspondence, and even a wry social comment in the form of a limerick. One piece was written as cultural propaganda for a magazine airdropped into occupied France by the Royal Air Force.

The volume brings a wealth of new material to light. Twenty-eight of the included works are published here for the first time; another thirty-eight were published in circumstances obscure enough that they went uncatalogued in the standard Eliot bibliography by Donald Gallup.

Eliot has a global readership of long standing, and his prose writings range to such fields as economics, education, philosophy, politics, theology, and cultural theory as well as literature. Mindful of the diverse audiences interested in Eliot, the editors have annotated each item in the Complete Prose series to make it accessible to an international readership and to scholars in any discipline. The annotations are designed not only to clarify and to point up literary references, but to illuminate both the immediate and the larger intellectual contexts of Eliot’s writings.

Modern Language Association Prize For a Scholarly Edition

Part of a long-running, multivolume, digital collaborative edition, volumes 5 and 6 of The Complete Prose of T. S. Eliot: The Critical Edition display uniform editorial excellence. Their thorough contextual introductions, sophisticated annotations merging intelligent commentary with brevity and completeness, and superb indexes make the volumes a pleasure to read and to use. Together they present new materials, open doors to further discovery, and enlarge our understanding of Eliot as the public intellectual at work.