Writing Wars

Writing Wars Authorship and American War Fiction, WWI to Present - The New American Canon

Paperback (30 Dec 2022)

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Publisher's Synopsis

Who writes novels about war? For nearly a century after World War I, the answer was simple: soldiers who had been there. The assumption that a person must have experienced war in the flesh in order to write about it in fiction was taken for granted by writers, reviewers, critics, and even scholars.

Contemporary American fiction tells a different story. Less than half of the authors of contemporary war novels are veterans. And that's hardly the only change. Today's war novelists focus on the psychological and moral challenges of soldiers coming home rather than the physical danger of combat overseas. They also imagine the consequences of the wars from non-American perspectives in a way that defies the genre's conventions. To understand why these changes have occurred, David Eisler argues that we must go back nearly fifty years, to the political decision to abolish the draft. The ramifications rippled into the field of cultural production, transforming the foundational characteristics- authorship, content, and form-of the American war fiction genre.

Book information

ISBN: 9781609388652
Publisher: University of Iowa Press
Imprint: University of Iowa Press
Pub date:
DEWEY: 813.0093581
DEWEY edition: 23/eng/20220627
Language: English
Number of pages: 253
Weight: 363g
Height: 226mm
Width: 151mm
Spine width: 18mm