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Bodies of Water in a Barren Modernity”: Hydrofeminism, Material Ecocriticism, and Fluid Ontology in T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land

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Bodies of Water in a Barren Modernity”: Hydrofeminism, Material Ecocriticism, and Fluid Ontology in T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land


Dr. Sourav Kumar Nag



Dr. Sourav Kumar Nag "Bodies of Water in a Barren Modernity”: Hydrofeminism, Material Ecocriticism, and Fluid Ontology in T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land" Published in International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development (ijtsrd), ISSN: 2456-6470, Volume-10 | Issue-1, February 2026, pp.883-887, URL: https://www.ijtsrd.com/papers/ijtsrd100143.pdf

This essay offers a hydrofeminist reading of T. S. Eliot’s The Waste Land (1922), situating the poem within contemporary material ecocritical and posthuman feminist theory. Drawing on Astrida Neimanis’s concept of hydrofeminism, Stacy Alaimo’s trans -corporeality, Serenella Iovino’s material narrativity, and new materialist thought, this study argues that Eliot’s poem stages not simply spiritual desolation but a crisis of circulation—ecological, gendered, and epistemological. Water in The Waste Land emerges as both absence and excess, purification and contamination, dissolution and relational ontology. Through close readings of the Thames, the typist episode, Phlebas the Phoenician, Tiresias, and the apocalyptic drought of “What the Thunder Said,” this paper demonstrates that Eliot’s modernist fragmentation mirrors fluid ontology even as it dramatizes the breakdown of sustainable flow. Engaging over thirty-five critics—from Cleanth Brooks and F. R. Leavis to Bonnie Kime Scott, Maud Ellmann, Michael North, and Jahan Ramazani—this essay reframes The Waste Land as a proto-hydrofeminist text that anticipates contemporary ecological feminist thought. Rather than reading water solely as symbolic redemption or spiritual lack, this study positions it as material agent, gendered medium, and archive of violence. The poem’s ultimate gesture toward rain does not restore transcendence but gestures toward fragile hydro-ethical interdependence.

ecological apocalyptic drought feminist hydro-ethical.


IJTSRD100143
Volume-10 | Issue-1, February 2026
883-887
IJTSRD | www.ijtsrd.com | E-ISSN 2456-6470
Copyright © 2019 by author(s) and International Journal of Trend in Scientific Research and Development Journal. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY 4.0) (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0)

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