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A Muse
of Fire: Literature, Art and War
A D Harvey
This is the first book to relate to the literature
and art of the First World War to the literature and art produced by the
Second World War and by earlier wars. A Muse of Fire is also the first
serious attempt to examine the whole range of war poetry and war fiction
in English in its relation to the work of German, French, Italian and -
to a lesser extent - Russian, Danish, and Hungarian authors.
Before 1914 few authors wrote about or experienced
war. War, especially its reality, was not the proper subject of literature;
while writers seldom served in the armed forces and were almost never in
battle.
More than half this book deals with the First
World War. In successive chapters A.D. Harvey discusses what sort of people,
in what sort of physical and psychological conditions, wrote about the
war; or painted it; how they handled the challenge of describing their
experiences with complete honesty; what literary and artistic techniques
they employed; how other forms of creative talent were fostered by the
war; and how far memoirs of the war prepared the way for the next one.
The account given of the Second World War
in the final section, like the chapters on pre-1914 war literature, provides
far more than simply an introduction and conclusion to the central part
of the book. It is an important contribution to an understanding of how
literature and art relate to the psychological and social structures of
the communities within which they are produced.
336 pages April 1998
1 85285 168 6 £25
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