Description

Book Synopsis
Rupert Brooke died in April 1915, on the eve of the Gallipoli landings. During the First World War Brooke was the iconic poet-soldier, adored and mimicked by readers and would-be writers—both in and out of uniform—with an international following that has neither been examined nor explained since. The general shift in attitudes toward war and the manner in which the war poets are presented meant that Brooke was recast as the exemplar of pre-war innocence, forever swimming in faintly saccharine, nakedly patriotic streams born of his famous poems. Rupert Brooke in the First World War takes a celebrity of the war who became an idol for fellow writers, politicians, literary elites and the general public, and tells the story of his life and famously romantic death, providing readers a fuller sense not only of the human being and his singular life and circumstances, but also of the world he inhabited, and the passions and tastes of men and women living through a period of great upheaval.

Trade Review
‘Miller is an expert guide to the journalistic efflorescence of war writing… Miller’s book is a valuable reminder of his [Brooke’s] continuing significance for students of the period.’
Roger Ebbatson, Dymock Poets and Friends
‘Miller's succinct study both evokes and deconstructs the myth of "England's poet-soldier." Her narrative is supported and enlivened by relevant quotations and illustrations. Though she espouses no allegiance to a specific critical school, her work is close in spirit to Pierre's Bourdieu's Rules of Art...especially in its investigation of the factors that led to Brooke's immediate and long-lasting canonization. Students and scholars of either the life and poetry of Rupert Brooke or World War I will find Alisa Miller's book to be discerning and instructive.’
Yann Tholoniat, Michigan War Studies
'Miller states in conclusion that her book ‘is an attempt to assess and understand a particular cult figure in the context that created him. And it tries to collate and consider the language, people, and institutions that encouraged them – and him – to be read in the way that they were’ (p. 225). She succeeds admirably in this task, and her book should be of interest to anyone interested in not only Brooke or poetry more generally but also the cultural and institutional underpinnings that helped make the war possible and take the precise form it did.'
Tim Dayton, First World War Studies

Table of Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction

I. Life
Chapter 1: Youth
Chapter 2: The Idyll
Chapter 3: Self-mobilisation
Chapter 4: Enlistment
Chapter 5: War and Waiting
Chapter 6: The War Sonnets
Chapter 7: Transport

II. Afterlife
Chapter 8: Patriotic Poetry
Chapter 9: Public Death
Chapter 10: Syndication
Chapter 11: Image
Chapter 12: Patrons
Chapter 13: Readers
Chapter 14: Poet-soldiers
Chapter 15: Careful Critics
Chapter 16: Export

Conclusion
Bibliography

Rupert Brooke in the First World War

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Mon 6 Jul 2026.

    A Paperback / softback by Alisa Miller

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      View other formats and editions of Rupert Brooke in the First World War by Alisa Miller

      Publisher: Liverpool University Press
      Publication Date: 01/04/2021
      ISBN13: 9781800859579, 978-1800859579
      ISBN10: 1800859570

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Rupert Brooke died in April 1915, on the eve of the Gallipoli landings. During the First World War Brooke was the iconic poet-soldier, adored and mimicked by readers and would-be writers—both in and out of uniform—with an international following that has neither been examined nor explained since. The general shift in attitudes toward war and the manner in which the war poets are presented meant that Brooke was recast as the exemplar of pre-war innocence, forever swimming in faintly saccharine, nakedly patriotic streams born of his famous poems. Rupert Brooke in the First World War takes a celebrity of the war who became an idol for fellow writers, politicians, literary elites and the general public, and tells the story of his life and famously romantic death, providing readers a fuller sense not only of the human being and his singular life and circumstances, but also of the world he inhabited, and the passions and tastes of men and women living through a period of great upheaval.

      Trade Review
      ‘Miller is an expert guide to the journalistic efflorescence of war writing… Miller’s book is a valuable reminder of his [Brooke’s] continuing significance for students of the period.’
      Roger Ebbatson, Dymock Poets and Friends
      ‘Miller's succinct study both evokes and deconstructs the myth of "England's poet-soldier." Her narrative is supported and enlivened by relevant quotations and illustrations. Though she espouses no allegiance to a specific critical school, her work is close in spirit to Pierre's Bourdieu's Rules of Art...especially in its investigation of the factors that led to Brooke's immediate and long-lasting canonization. Students and scholars of either the life and poetry of Rupert Brooke or World War I will find Alisa Miller's book to be discerning and instructive.’
      Yann Tholoniat, Michigan War Studies
      'Miller states in conclusion that her book ‘is an attempt to assess and understand a particular cult figure in the context that created him. And it tries to collate and consider the language, people, and institutions that encouraged them – and him – to be read in the way that they were’ (p. 225). She succeeds admirably in this task, and her book should be of interest to anyone interested in not only Brooke or poetry more generally but also the cultural and institutional underpinnings that helped make the war possible and take the precise form it did.'
      Tim Dayton, First World War Studies

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgements
      Introduction

      I. Life
      Chapter 1: Youth
      Chapter 2: The Idyll
      Chapter 3: Self-mobilisation
      Chapter 4: Enlistment
      Chapter 5: War and Waiting
      Chapter 6: The War Sonnets
      Chapter 7: Transport

      II. Afterlife
      Chapter 8: Patriotic Poetry
      Chapter 9: Public Death
      Chapter 10: Syndication
      Chapter 11: Image
      Chapter 12: Patrons
      Chapter 13: Readers
      Chapter 14: Poet-soldiers
      Chapter 15: Careful Critics
      Chapter 16: Export

      Conclusion
      Bibliography

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