Lexington Books
Pages: 368
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7391-0579-5 • Hardback • October 2004 • $147.00 • (£113.00)
Sara Munson Deats is Distinguished University Professor of English and Co-Director of the Center of Applied Humanities at the University of South Florida.
Lagretta Tallent Lenker is Director of Graduate Certificates at University of South Florida.
Merry G. Perry is Assistant Professor of English at the West Chester University of Pennsylvania.
1 I. Introduction
2 Introduction: War and Words
3 Part I: Arms and the Man: Voices from the Center
4 Chapter 1: Stories of War and Peace: Sacred, Secular, and Holy
5 Chapter 2: The Chalice and the Blade: Engendering War in Classical Literature
6 Chapter 3: Violence, Terrorism, and War in Marlowe's Tamburlaine Plays
7 Chapter 4: Henry V at War: Christian King or Model Machiavel
8 Chapter 5: 'Born for Opposition': Lord Bryon's Irresistible Tug-of-War
9 Chapter 6: 'Civilized Barbarity': Melville and the Dark Paradoxes of Waging Modern War
10 Chapter 7: Editha's War: 'How Glorious!'
11 Chapter 8: Make War on War: A Shavian Conundrum
12 Chapter 9: Words, War, and Peace: The Nature of Orwell's Pacifism
13 Chapter 10: Understanding Hemingway's Multiple Voices of War: A Rhetorical Study
14 Part II: Arms and the Other: Voices from the Margins
15 Chapter 11: Seule la culture désintéressée': Virginia Woolf, Gender, and Culture in Time of War
16 Chapter 12: Propaganda, Militarism, and the Home Front in Helen Zenna Smith's Not So Quiet . . . Stepdaughters of War
17 Chapter 13: Who's Speaking? What Are They Saying? Women, Words, and War
18 Chapter 14: War of Words: War 'with' and 'against' in African-American Literature
19 Epilogue: Marlowe in tempore belli
This scrupulously gathered collection of essays pursues a striking concept. . . . How does literary genius, from Homer to Shakespeare to Tolstoi and Yeats, manage to lift the horror of war, savagery, and repression into the realm of tragic greatness? The editors have given us much to think out, in the classroom and in our private studies.
— David Bevington, University of Chicago
Highly Recommended.
— Choice Reviews
An insightful an dthought provoking study, and should be read by anyone interested in the literature of war and how western society views this important and destructive institution.
— H-Net: Humanities and Social Science Reviews Online