T.S. Eliot's Objective Correlative for 6th Semester


T.S. Eliot’s Objective correlative, by P.B.:

Eliot used the term objective correlative exclusively to refer to his claimed artistic mechanism where emotion is evoked in the audience. The only way of experiencing emotion in the form of art is an objective correlative.
Eliot described Hamlet as ‘Most certainly an artistic failure’- because its central character is dominated by an emotion which is inexpressible because it is in excess of the facts as they appear. The only way of expressing emotion in art is by finding an ‘objective correlative’ in other-words, a set of objects, a situation, a chain of events which shall be the formula of that particular emotion. When the external facts which must terminate in sensory experience, are given, the emotion is immediately evoked. He acknowledged that such a circumstance is something which every person of sensibility has known, but felt that in trying to represent it dramatically.
Shakespeare tackled a problem which proved too much for him. Shakespeare has failed to provide Hamlet with such objective correlative. According to Eliot, the feelings of Hamlet are not sufficiently supported by the story and the other characters surrounding him. The purpose of objective correlative is to express the character’s emotion by showing them rather than describing the feelings as pictured earlier by Plato, Peter Barry.
1.The term ‘objective correlative’ was popularized by to T. S. Eliot in his essay, ‘Hamlet and His Problem’.
2.The term ‘objective correlative’ first used by Washington Allston around 1840 in the ‘Introductory Discourse’.
3.Eliot said (Hamlet) as ‘most certainly an artistic failure’.
4.Eliot’s impersonal conception gets expression in his ‘Tradition and individual Talent’(1917).