Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part I The Great War in British literary culture
- 1 British war memoirs
- 2 The British novel and the war
- 3 The Great War, history, and the English lyric
- 4 British women’s writing of the Great War
- 5 The Great War and literary modernism in England
- Part II The world war: Pan-European views, transatlantic prospects
- Part III Postwar engagements
- Guide to Further Reading
- Index
- Series List
1 - British war memoirs
from Part I - The Great War in British literary culture
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- Introduction
- Part I The Great War in British literary culture
- 1 British war memoirs
- 2 The British novel and the war
- 3 The Great War, history, and the English lyric
- 4 British women’s writing of the Great War
- 5 The Great War and literary modernism in England
- Part II The world war: Pan-European views, transatlantic prospects
- Part III Postwar engagements
- Guide to Further Reading
- Index
- Series List
Summary
The genre, “memoir,” is an odd one, encompassing simple chronicles and more elaborate, analytic or poetically structured accounts. Those First World War memoirs that have become canonical in literary studies have, not surprisingly, been the more structured work of poets. These are the main focus of the present chapter, but other, less-known work will be touched on. As with the poetry of these memoirists, one of the chief literary interests of their work is the way traditional generic or formal literary features (corresponding broadly with a set of received values about masculinity, heroism, the countryside, and so on) are twisted into something different by the necessity of representing experience that compels a revaluation of all such values. These memoirs are the work, mainly, of writers who do not otherwise conspicuously engage with modernity, perhaps because they were too young to have reached any sort of maturity as writers before their war experience. And after the war that experience remained as their most intense reality – despite the efforts of Robert Graves, for example, to say “good-bye to all that.” The stress that traditional forms undergo in these memoirs (as in the war poetry of the same and other poets) is sufficient to turn the writers into something very close to modernists, almost against their will, and in relation to the war only. Still, they form a kind of “alternative current” of modernism in England by virtue of which the movement is sometimes seen as largely a response to the upheaval of the war. The prototype of such understanding is the public response to the official exhibitions of war paintings held in London in 1919. “Cubism” could now be “understood,” even if it was not liked.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2005
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