1956
DOI: 10.2307/1768289
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T. S. Eliot and the Poetry of George Seferis

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Cited by 6 publications
(2 citation statements)
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“…Alternatively, ascending infection from the cloaca to a remnant of the female reproductive tract may have led to the formation of postoperative abscess because this case had shown uncleanness of the cloaca postoperatively due to the Elizabeth collar and bandages. This pattern of infection has been mentioned in the literature [ 8 , 10 , 12 ]. Unfortunately, the surgical and medical treatments performed in this case did not prove curative.…”
supporting
confidence: 53%
“…Alternatively, ascending infection from the cloaca to a remnant of the female reproductive tract may have led to the formation of postoperative abscess because this case had shown uncleanness of the cloaca postoperatively due to the Elizabeth collar and bandages. This pattern of infection has been mentioned in the literature [ 8 , 10 , 12 ]. Unfortunately, the surgical and medical treatments performed in this case did not prove curative.…”
supporting
confidence: 53%
“…Though Eliot never used this term again in his criticism and it has never become established in the international critical vocabulary, the 'mythical method' has proved a convenient term for allowing Greek critics not to engage in a wider discussion and exploration of the other parameters involved in the reception of antiquity by Greek poets. 16 Leaving aside the question of whether Seferis' mythical method is indebted to Eliot's The Waste Land and to what extent Mythistorema 'is not a poem written with the mythical method but one that also includes the mythical method' (Vayenas 1979: 154), the method itself -first applied to Seferis' poetry by Edmund Keeley (1956) -is not clearly defined. 17 So it seems best to deal separately with the existing definitions of the method, its aims and effects and then finally its epistemological implications.…”
Section: Seferis and The Mythical Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%