Description

This book examines the representation of the ghost-soldier in literature published from 1914 1934 both marking the presence of trauma and attempting to make sense of trauma. Andrew Smith examines short stories, novels, poems and memoirs that employ ghosts to reflect upon feelings of loss, paralleling the literary context with accounts of shell-shock which construe the damaged soldier as psychologically missing and therefore spectre-like. The author argues that literary and non-literary texts repeatedly deploy a form of the uncanny, familiar from a Gothic tradition, as way of reflecting upon grief. In support of this claim, he draws on fiction by well-known authors such as M. R. James, E. F. Benson, Dorothy L. Sayers and Dennis Wheatley, alongside largely forgotten contributions to The Strand and other periodical publications such as The Occult Review.

Gothic Fiction and the Writing of Trauma, 1914-1934: The Ghosts of World War One

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Hardback by Andrew Smith

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This book examines the representation of the ghost-soldier in literature published from 1914 1934 both marking the presence of trauma... Read more

    Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
    Publication Date: 31/07/2022
    ISBN13: 9781474443432, 978-1474443432
    ISBN10: 1474443435

    Number of Pages: 232

    Non Fiction , ELT & Literary Studies , Education

    Description

    This book examines the representation of the ghost-soldier in literature published from 1914 1934 both marking the presence of trauma and attempting to make sense of trauma. Andrew Smith examines short stories, novels, poems and memoirs that employ ghosts to reflect upon feelings of loss, paralleling the literary context with accounts of shell-shock which construe the damaged soldier as psychologically missing and therefore spectre-like. The author argues that literary and non-literary texts repeatedly deploy a form of the uncanny, familiar from a Gothic tradition, as way of reflecting upon grief. In support of this claim, he draws on fiction by well-known authors such as M. R. James, E. F. Benson, Dorothy L. Sayers and Dennis Wheatley, alongside largely forgotten contributions to The Strand and other periodical publications such as The Occult Review.

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