An examination of the interface between private narratives of loss
and grief in wartime and publicly accepted and legitimized forms of
grieving and mourning. Considering the implications of using gender
as an analytic category in examining cultural narratives of loss in
wartime, the author looks at men's and women's experiences of war
both 'at home' and 'at the front'. The analysis spans the two World
Wars to the Vietnam War and the recent war in Iraq, and draws on a
wide range of auto/biographical sources from diaries and poetry to
weblogs.
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