"Dismantling Glory" presents the most personal and powerful
words ever written about the horrors of battle, by the very
soldiers who put their lives on the line. Focusing on American and
English poetry from World War I, World War II, and the Vietnam War,
Lorrie Goldensohn, a poet and pacifist, affirms that by and large,
twentieth-century war poetry is fundamentally antiwar. She examines
the changing nature of the war lyric and takes on the literary
thinking of two countries separated by their common language.
World War I poets such as Wilfred Owen emphasized the role of
soldier as victim. By World War II, however, English and American
poets, influenced by the leftist politics of W. H. Auden, tended to
indict the whole of society, not just its leaders, for militarism.
During the Vietnam War, soldier poets accepted themselves as both
victims and perpetrators of war's misdeeds, writing a
nontraditional, more personally candid war poetry.
The book not only discusses the poetry of trench warfare but
also shows how the lives of civilians -- women and children in
particular -- entered a global war poetry dominated by air power,
invasion, and occupation. Goldensohn argues that World War II
blurred the boundaries between battleground and home front, thus
bringing women and civilians into war discourse as never before.
She discusses the interplay of fascination and disapproval in the
texts of twentieth-century war and notes the way in which homage to
war hero and victim contends with revulsion at war's horror and
waste.
In addition to placing the war lyric in literary and historical
context, the book discusses in detail individual poets such as
Wilfred Owen, W. H. Auden, Keith Douglas, Randall Jarrell, and a
group of poets from the Vietnam War, including W. D. Ehrhart, Bruce
Weigl, Yusef Komunyakaa, David Huddle, and Doug Anderson.
"Dismantling Glory" is an original and compelling look at the
way twentieth-century war poetry posited new relations between
masculinity and war, changed and complicated the representation of
war, and expanded the scope of antiwar thinking.
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