Thirty-seven chapters, written by leading literary critics from across the world, describe the latest thinking about twentieth-century war poetry. The book maps both the uniqueness of each war and the continuities between poets of different wars, while the interconnections between the literatures of war and peacetime, and between combatant and civilian poets, are fully considered. The focus is on Britain and Ireland, but links are drawn with the poetry of the United States and continental Europe. The Oxford Handbook feeds a growing interest in war poetry and offers, in toto, a definitive…mehr
Thirty-seven chapters, written by leading literary critics from across the world, describe the latest thinking about twentieth-century war poetry. The book maps both the uniqueness of each war and the continuities between poets of different wars, while the interconnections between the literatures of war and peacetime, and between combatant and civilian poets, are fully considered. The focus is on Britain and Ireland, but links are drawn with the poetry of the United States and continental Europe. The Oxford Handbook feeds a growing interest in war poetry and offers, in toto, a definitive survey of the terrain. It is intended for a broad audience, made up of specialists and also graduates and undergraduates, and is an essential resource for both scholars of particular poets and for those interested in wider debates about modern poetry. This scholarly and readable assessment of the field will provide an important point of reference for decades to come.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
* Introduction * Beginnings * 1: Matthew Bevis: Fighting Talk: Victorian War Poetry * 2: Ralph Pite: Graver Things, Braver Things: Hardy's Martial Zest * 3: Daniel Karlin: From Dark Defile to Gethsemane: Rudyard Kipling's War Poetry * The Great War * 4: Santanu Das: First World War Poetry and the Realm of the Senses * 5: Stacy Gillis: Many Sisters to Many Brothers: Woman Poets of the Great War * 6: Mark Rawlinson: Wilfred Owen * 7: John Lee: Shakespeare and the Great War * 8: David Goldie: Was there a Scottish War Literature? Scotland, Poetry, and the First World War * 9: Vivien Noakes: War Poetry, or the Poetry of War? Isaac Rosenberg, David Jones, Ivor Gurney * 10: Vincent Sherry: The Great War and Modernist Poetry in England * 11: Fran Brearton: A War of Friendship: Robert Graves and Siegfried Sassoon * 12: Marjorie Perloff: 'Easter, 1916': Yeats's World War I Poem * Entre Deux Guerres * 13: Stan Smith: 'What the dawn will bring to light': Credulity and Commitment in the Ideological Construction of 'Spain' * 14: Rainer Emig: Unwriting the Good Fight: Auden's 'Spain' and its Contexts * 15: John Lyon: War, Politics and Disappearing Poetry: Auden, Yeats, Empson * The Second World War * 16: Dawn Bellamy: 'Others have come before you': the Influence of the Great War on Second World War Poets * 17: Roderick Watson: Death's Proletariat: Scottish Poets of the Second World War * 18: Gerwyn Wiliams: New Territory: Alun Llywelyn-Williams and Welsh Poetry of the Second World War * 19: Helen Goethals: The Muse that Failed: Poetry and Patriotism during the Second World War * 20: Peter McDonald: 'Since Munich, What?': Louis MacNeice's Poetry of the Second World War * 21: Geoffrey Hill: Sidney Keyes in Historical Perspective * Continuities in Modern War Poetry * 22: Hugh Haughton: Anthologizing War * 23: Simon Featherstone: Mina Loy and E. J. Scovell: Defining Women's War Poetry * 24: Edna Longley: War Pastorals, 1914-2004 * 25: Sarah Cole: The Poetry of Pain * 26: Peter Robinson: 'Down in the terraces between the targets': Civilians * 27: Cornelia D. J. Pearsall: Complicate Me When I'm Dead: The War Remains of Keith Douglas and Ted Hughes * 28: Tara Christie: 'For Isaac Rosenberg': Geoffrey Hill, Michael Longley, Cathal O'Searcaigh * 29: Jon Stallworthy: The Fury and the Mire * 'Post-war' poetry * 30: Gareth Reeves: 'This is plenty. This is more than enough': Poetry and the Memory of the Second World War * 31: Claire M. Tylee: British Holocaust Poetry: Songs of Experience * 32: Alan Marshall: Quiet Americans: Responses to War in some British and American Poets of the 1960s * 33: Adam Piette: Pointing to East and West: British Cold War Poetry * 34: David Wheatley: Dichtung und Wahrheit: Contemporary War and the Non-Combatant Poet * Northern Ireland * 35: Paul Volsik: Constructing and Deconstructing the Epic - Contemporary Northern Irish Poetry * 36: Brendan Corcoran: 'Stalled in the Pre-Articulate': Heaney, Poetry, and War * 37: April Warman: Unavowed Engagement: Paul Muldoon as War Poet * Notes on Contributors
* Introduction * Beginnings * 1: Matthew Bevis: Fighting Talk: Victorian War Poetry * 2: Ralph Pite: Graver Things, Braver Things: Hardy's Martial Zest * 3: Daniel Karlin: From Dark Defile to Gethsemane: Rudyard Kipling's War Poetry * The Great War * 4: Santanu Das: First World War Poetry and the Realm of the Senses * 5: Stacy Gillis: Many Sisters to Many Brothers: Woman Poets of the Great War * 6: Mark Rawlinson: Wilfred Owen * 7: John Lee: Shakespeare and the Great War * 8: David Goldie: Was there a Scottish War Literature? Scotland, Poetry, and the First World War * 9: Vivien Noakes: War Poetry, or the Poetry of War? Isaac Rosenberg, David Jones, Ivor Gurney * 10: Vincent Sherry: The Great War and Modernist Poetry in England * 11: Fran Brearton: A War of Friendship: Robert Graves and Siegfried Sassoon * 12: Marjorie Perloff: 'Easter, 1916': Yeats's World War I Poem * Entre Deux Guerres * 13: Stan Smith: 'What the dawn will bring to light': Credulity and Commitment in the Ideological Construction of 'Spain' * 14: Rainer Emig: Unwriting the Good Fight: Auden's 'Spain' and its Contexts * 15: John Lyon: War, Politics and Disappearing Poetry: Auden, Yeats, Empson * The Second World War * 16: Dawn Bellamy: 'Others have come before you': the Influence of the Great War on Second World War Poets * 17: Roderick Watson: Death's Proletariat: Scottish Poets of the Second World War * 18: Gerwyn Wiliams: New Territory: Alun Llywelyn-Williams and Welsh Poetry of the Second World War * 19: Helen Goethals: The Muse that Failed: Poetry and Patriotism during the Second World War * 20: Peter McDonald: 'Since Munich, What?': Louis MacNeice's Poetry of the Second World War * 21: Geoffrey Hill: Sidney Keyes in Historical Perspective * Continuities in Modern War Poetry * 22: Hugh Haughton: Anthologizing War * 23: Simon Featherstone: Mina Loy and E. J. Scovell: Defining Women's War Poetry * 24: Edna Longley: War Pastorals, 1914-2004 * 25: Sarah Cole: The Poetry of Pain * 26: Peter Robinson: 'Down in the terraces between the targets': Civilians * 27: Cornelia D. J. Pearsall: Complicate Me When I'm Dead: The War Remains of Keith Douglas and Ted Hughes * 28: Tara Christie: 'For Isaac Rosenberg': Geoffrey Hill, Michael Longley, Cathal O'Searcaigh * 29: Jon Stallworthy: The Fury and the Mire * 'Post-war' poetry * 30: Gareth Reeves: 'This is plenty. This is more than enough': Poetry and the Memory of the Second World War * 31: Claire M. Tylee: British Holocaust Poetry: Songs of Experience * 32: Alan Marshall: Quiet Americans: Responses to War in some British and American Poets of the 1960s * 33: Adam Piette: Pointing to East and West: British Cold War Poetry * 34: David Wheatley: Dichtung und Wahrheit: Contemporary War and the Non-Combatant Poet * Northern Ireland * 35: Paul Volsik: Constructing and Deconstructing the Epic - Contemporary Northern Irish Poetry * 36: Brendan Corcoran: 'Stalled in the Pre-Articulate': Heaney, Poetry, and War * 37: April Warman: Unavowed Engagement: Paul Muldoon as War Poet * Notes on Contributors
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