Contents
The book discusses significant individual poems by the writers named, exploring them within their social, political and aesthetic frames and summarising important earlier critical readings and responses.
Chapter 1: “What did they expect?” The nature of war poetry. The Invention of War Poetry; The Place of Poetry in 1914; Issues of Gender; Thomas Hardy “˜Men who March Away” Conclusion.
Chapter 2: “˜To battle for the truth”: Popular Poetry. Defining “˜Popular” Responses to war in popular art forms; Ideal, Order and Consolation; Structure, idea and ideology in popular poetry; Anthologies; Other voices.
Chapter 3: “˜Nobody asked what the women thought”: Poetry by Women. Approaching War Poetry by Women; The Variety of Poetry by Women.
Chapter 4: “˜Young blood and high blood”: Canonical writers. Displaced nature: Graves, Blunden and Gurney; Siegfried Sassoon; Wilfred Owen; Edward Thomas; Other cultures, other nations; David Jones; Irish poetry; Scottish poetry.
Chapter 5: Placing War Poetry. War poetry and Modernism; Last thoughts.
Bibliography