Writing War in the Twentieth Century

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University of Virginia Press, 2000 - 300 pages

The twentieth century will be remembered for great innovation in two particular areas: art and culture, and technological advancement. Much of its prodigious technical inventiveness, however, was pressed into service in the conduct of warfare. Why, asks Margot Norris, did violence and suffering on such an immense scale fail to arouse artistic and cultural expressions powerful enough to prevent the recurrence of these horrors? Why was art not more successful--through its use of dramatic, emotionally charged material, its ability to stir imagination and arouse empathy and outrage--in producing an alternative to the military logic that legitimates war?

Military argument in the twentieth century has been fortified by the authority of the rationalism that we attribute to science, Norris argues. Warfare is therefore legitimized by powerful discourses that art's own arsenal of styles and genres has limited power to counter. Art's difficulty in representing the violent death of entire generations or populations has been particularly acute.

Choosing works that have become representative of their historically violent moment, Norris explores not only their aesthetic strategies and perspectives but also the nature of the power they wield and the ethical engagements they enable or impede. She begins by mapping the altered ethical terrain of modern technological warfare, with its increasing targeting of civilian populations for destruction. She then proceeds historically with chapters on the trench poetry and modernist poetry of World War I, Hemingway's A Farewell to Arms and Erich Maria Remarque's All Quiet on the Western Front, both the book and the film of Schindler's List, the conflicting historical stories of the Manhattan Project, a comparison of American and Japanese accounts of Hiroshima, Francis Ford Coppola's film Apocalypse Now, and the effects of press censorship in the Persian Gulf War.

By looking at the whole span of the century's writing on war, Norris provides a fascinating critique of art's ethical power and limitations, along with its participation in--as well as protest against--the suffering that human beings have brought upon themselves.

 

Contents

WRITING WAR IN THE TWENTIETH CENTURY An Introduction
1
THE TRACE OF THE TRENCHES Revisiting Modernism and World War I
33
THE NOVEL AS WAR Lies and Truth in Hemingways a Farewell to Arms
58
THE NOVEL OF DEPOPULATION Remarque s All Quiet on the Western Front
78
UNMAKING AND REMAKING A WORLD Thomas Keneallys book and Schindlers List
99
DIVIDING THE INDIVISIBLE The Fissured Story of the Manhattan Project
143
WRITING THE APOCALYPSE OF HIROSHIMA
172
MODERNISM AND VIETNAM Francis Frod Coppolas Apocalypse Now
207
ONLY THE GUNS HAVE EYES Military Censorship and the Body Count in the Persian Gulf War
234
Copyright

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About the author (2000)

Margot Norris, Professor of English and Comparative Literature at the University of California, Irvine, is also the author of Beasts of the Modern Imagination: Darwin, Nietzsche, Kafka, Ernst, and Lawrence, and two books on James Joyce.

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