Indian elements in the works of W.B. Yeats, T.S. Eliot & Aldous Huxley / Khan Sarwar Murshid.
Material type:
- 9789845062800
- 821.8 MUI

Item type | Current library | Collection | Shelving location | Call number | Copy number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
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KU Central Library | Rack No. : 49 Shelve No. : A-03 | Reference Section (Non-Issuable Books) | 821.8 MUI 2021 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | C-1 (NI) | Not For Loan | 53184 |
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821.3 CAJ 2000 Major works / | 821.6 LEH 2006 The Annotated hunting of the snark : the definitive edition / | 821.7 JAR 1989 Romanticism writing and sexual difference : essays on the Prelude / | 821.8 MUI 2021 Indian elements in the works of W.B. Yeats, T.S. Eliot & Aldous Huxley / | 821.912 SCE 1999 Eliot's dark angel : intersections of life and art / | 822 MEH 2009 How plays work : reading and performenc / | 822.33 DAS 2000 Shakespeare's dramatic genres : oxford shakespeare topics / |
The book deals with themes of eternal concern such as right conduct and moral responsibility, the relationship between the physical and the metaphysical, notions of time and infinity, and the search for truth, justice, enlightenment and inner harmony. At its core is embedded a quest for the values that must define human existence. Disillusioned by man’s capacity for evil after the great wars, Western scholars began to look east in search of moral certitude. Vedanta as philosophy, its idea of the Absolute Principle represented by Brahman, concepts of renewal and continuity embedded in the knowledge that ‘all that has been shall be again’, along with Buddhist concepts of right conduct and worldly detachment, seemed to provide for an orderly vision. Yeats, Eliot and Huxley all sought solace in the philosophy and culture of India. Together, they represented ‘a phase in the consciousness of Europe’. In their search for intellectual and moral certitude, each embarked on a personal journey determined by their connection to Christianity, the nature of society and the relationships they valued. The colonised East thus exacted its revenge on the Western mind, ironically by opening up new frontiers of intellectual exploration.
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