The “war poem” has, since Homer, served as a means for non-combatants to access the experience of warfare; evolving over time, the genre reflects and revises cultural attitudes toward war. Since the Great War, the war poem has become a tool of political protest, a declamation of war’s destructiveness and a plea for understanding on behalf of the soldiers forced or duped into fighting it. As a “literature of trauma,” this poetry is often seen as therapeutic exercise through which veterans can transcend the “nightmare” of war through cathartic expression. The American poetry written on Viet Nam challenges this interpretive model. Previous war poetry casts the soldier as war’s ultimate victim. From Sassoon’s Christ-like trench soldiers to Jarrell’s eviscerated ball-turret gunner, it is what happens to the soldier…
Author: Hill, Matthew Blake
Source: University of Maryland
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