the great war and modern memory
The Great War and Modern Memory brought out change to language, literature, and other aspects of cultural memory. The horrible conflicts that were brought out to the 19th century innocence had incubated the irony and pessimism that has influenced 20th century letters, politics, and popular opinion. Paul Fussell examines and analyzes literature, essays, poetry, and letters home. This book is mainly about World War I British literacy, and history. Irony plays a big role in this book, an irony between expectations and reality. Before the war, men could and did believe in gallantry, in battle as a sport and in idealized patriotism. After the thousands of British were killed in only four months time, irony became the do
This book was a critique about many things. There were many things in this book that caught my eye. These ideals had been shattered in the war that gave birth to the 20th century. The author, Paul Fussell, delivers an image to people that the war was reflected in the literature. Exploring the work of Siegfried Sassoon, Robert Graves, Edmund Blunden, David Jones, Isaac Rosenberg, and Wilfred Owen, Fussell supplies contexts, both actual and literary. He used these writers because they all effectively honored WWI as an historical experience with noticeable imaginative and artistic meaning. This book was a literate, literary, and illuminating account of the Great War, the one that changed a generation, ushered in the modern era, and revolutionized how we see the world. The main irony in this book was that the population rushed to support the war in order to support these 19th century ideals. As Fussell has noted "no front-line soldier or officer was without his amulet and every tunic pocket became a reliquary so urgent was the need that no talisman was too absurd. ------------------------------------------------------------------------**Bibliography**. For Fussell the experience of the First World War is synonymous with experience of the trenches. This book is focused almost exclusively on the combatant. The book documents how World War I gave us the standardized form, the wristwatch, daylight savings time, civilian censorship and bureaucratic substitution. This book is about the effects of World War I on human consciousness and attitudes. One that caught my attention was the argument about the modern distrust of language.
Common topics in this essay:
Farewell Arms,
War British,
World War,
Paul Fussell,
Modern Memory,
Owen Fussell,
world war,
paul fussell,
19th century,
20th century,
|