TY - GEN T1 - Authoring war : the literary representation of war from the Iliad to Iraq A1 - McLoughlin, Catherine Mary, 1970- LA - English PP - Cambridge, UK ; New York PB - Cambridge University Press YR - 2011 UL - https://ebooks.jgu.edu.in/Record/ebsco_acadsubs_ocn710993051 AB - "Kate McLoughlin's Authoring War is an ambitious and pioneering study of war writing across all literary genres from earliest times to the present day. Examining a range of cultures, she brings wide reading and close rhetorical analysis to illuminate how writers have met the challenge of representing violence, chaos and loss. War gives rise to problems of epistemology, scale, space, time, language and logic. She emphasises the importance of form to an understanding of war literature and establishes connections across periods and cultures from Homer to the 'War on Terror'. Exciting new critical groupings arise in consequence, as Byron's Don Juan is read alongside Heller's Catch-22 and English Civil War poetry alongside Second World War letters. Innovative in its approach and inventive in its encyclopedic range, Authoring War will be indispensable to any discussion of war representation"-- AB - "N War and Peace (1865-9), Nikolai Rostov responds enthusiastically to a request from Boris Drubetskoy to describe how and where he got his wound: He described the Scho·n Graben affair exactly as men who have taken part in battles always do describe them - that is, as they would like them to have been, as they have heard them described by others, and as sounds well, but not in the least as they really had been. Rostov was a truthful young man and would never have told a deliberate lie. He began his story with the intention of telling everything exactly as it happened, but imperceptibly, unconsciously and inevitably he passed into falsehood. If he had told the truth to his listeners who, like himself, had heard numerous descriptions of cavalry charges and had formed a definite idea of what a charge was like and were expecting a precisely similar account from him, either they would not have believed him or, worse still, would have thought Rostov himself to blame if what generally happens to those who describe cavalry charges had not happened to him"-- OP - 219 CN - PN56.W3 M43 2011eb SN - 9781139042253 SN - 1139042254 SN - 1107220904 SN - 9781107220904 SN - 1139036025 SN - 9781139036023 SN - 1283052075 SN - 9781283052078 SN - 9786613052070 SN - 6613052078 SN - 1139041487 SN - 9781139041485 SN - 1139044885 SN - 9781139044882 SN - 1139038346 SN - 9781139038348 SN - 0511782276 SN - 9780511782275 SN - 1139040715 SN - 9781139040716 SN - 9781107003903 SN - 1107003903 KW - War in literature. KW - War and literature. KW - Guerre dans la littérature. KW - Guerre et littérature. KW - LITERARY CRITICISM : European : English, Irish, Scottish, Welsh. KW - TRAVEL : Special Interest : Literary. KW - LITERARY CRITICISM : General. KW - War and literature KW - War in literature KW - Krieg : Motiv KW - Literatur KW - Oorlog. KW - Bellettrie. KW - Literatur : Motiv : Krieg. KW - Krieg : Motiv : Literatur. KW - Motiv (Literatur) KW - Krieg. KW - Krig i litteraturen. ER -