The Poetry Of Shell Shock: Wartime Trauma And Healing In Wilfred Owen, Ivor Gurney And Siegfried Sassoon - Wartime Trauma and Healing in Wilfred Owen, Ivor Gurney and Siegfried Sassoon
Daniel W. Hipp
McFarland (2005)
In Collection
#1257
0*
Lit Crit
Paperback 0786421746
English
The British poets Wilfred Owen, Ivor Gurney, and Siegfried Sassoon found themselves psychologically altered by what they experienced in the First World War. Owen was hospitalized in April 1917 for "shell shock" in Scotland, where he met Siegfried Sassoon in June of that year, hospitalized for the same affliction. Ivor Gurney found the war, ironically, to have been a place of relative stability within an otherwise tormented life; When he was wounded during the war's final year, his doctors observed signs of mental illness, which evolved into incapacitating psychosis by 1922.

For each of these men-all poets before the war-poetry served as a way to inscribe continuity into their lives, enabling them to retaliate against the war's propensity to render the lives of the participants discontinuous. Poetry allowed them to return to the war through memory and imagination, and poetry helped them to bring themselves back from psychological breakdown to a state of stability, based upon a relationship to the war that their literary war enabled them to create and discover.

This work investigates the ways in which the poetry of war functioned as a means for these three men to express the inexpressible and to extract value out of the experience of war. Bibliography and index are also included.

Product Details
LoC Classification PR605.W65H57 2005
Dewey 821/.91209358
Nationality Assorted
Pub Place Jefferson
Cover Price $35.00
No. of Pages 224
Height x Width 9.1 x 6.1  inch
Original Publication Year 2005
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Conflict WW1