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Women's fictional responses to the First World WarWomen's fictional responses to the First World War

Women's fictional responses to the First World War1997

Catherine O'Brien

About this book

Surveys of the First World War fiction of France and Germany have created a literary canon, which supports the theory that war is an intrinsically male ordeal. This study redresses that traditional androcentric bias by investigating the work of French and German women writers of 1914 through 1918. In comparing and contrasting issues of war and gender, this analysis leads to a greater understanding of women's ideological responses to the conflict, complements the visions of war found in the work of male authors, and extends the boundaries of received notions of the literary heritage of the First World War.

Details

First published
1997
OL Work ID
OL3230808W

Subjects

Comparative LiteratureFeminism and literatureFrench and GermanFrench fictionGerman and FrenchGerman fictionHistoryHistory and criticismLiterature and the warLiterature, ComparativeWomen and literatureWomen authorsWorld War, 1914-1918German fiction, history and criticismFrench fiction, history and criticismFrench fiction, women authorsComparative literature, french and germanWorld war, 1914-1918, literature and the war

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