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The Boredom and Futility of War in Patrick White's Fiction
2016
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Le Simplegadi , April no. 15 2016; (p. 65-73) This article investigates the representation of war in terms of uselessness and waste in the fiction of Patrick White, with a particular emphasis on the short story “After Alep”, written in 1945 when the writer was enrolled in the RAF as an Intelligence Officer. By analysing the story in the light of White’s approach to the war as to “the most horrifying and wasteful period” of his life (Marr 1992: 493), the article attempts to demonstrate how the narrative devices used by White contribute to demythologize the rhetoric of the war and of war heroes in a way that may be instrumental in conveying a message of peace out of the ultimate sense of futility transmitted by any war. - y Stories That Keep on Rising to the Surface : i racconti di Patrick White Verona : Universita di Verona. Dipartimento di Anglistica , 2003 Z1130147 2003 single work criticism
- y Stories That Keep on Rising to the Surface : i racconti di Patrick White Verona : Universita di Verona. Dipartimento di Anglistica , 2003 Z1130147 2003 single work criticism
-
The Boredom and Futility of War in Patrick White's Fiction
2016
single work
criticism
— Appears in: Le Simplegadi , April no. 15 2016; (p. 65-73) This article investigates the representation of war in terms of uselessness and waste in the fiction of Patrick White, with a particular emphasis on the short story “After Alep”, written in 1945 when the writer was enrolled in the RAF as an Intelligence Officer. By analysing the story in the light of White’s approach to the war as to “the most horrifying and wasteful period” of his life (Marr 1992: 493), the article attempts to demonstrate how the narrative devices used by White contribute to demythologize the rhetoric of the war and of war heroes in a way that may be instrumental in conveying a message of peace out of the ultimate sense of futility transmitted by any war.
Last amended 23 Mar 2001 14:03:13