This myth that war is glorious, heroic, full of adventure and excitement has been for centuries and even now exists for those who have not experienced it. Romantic visions have always been associated with war. Going into the war as classical heroes, fighting in it with ghastly wounds and returning home with the hope of hero worship and applause of the awaiting countrymen and many other similar visions have been envisioned by the romantic naive soldiers. But there exists a world of difference between seeing war from outside and seeing it from inside. The whole euphoria about war goes in air the moment these romantic naive soldiers participate in the war and confront the harsh realities of war as Erich Maria Remarque has said, “De...
Stephen Crane uses man in war to represent universal man in relation to a naturalistic universe. The...
This article discusses perceptions of World War II in modern American literature. Authors acknowledg...
Discusses the psychological effects of World War I and the interim war period on Hemingway and his w...
Comparison study. Draws on John Limon’s theories of war literature to show the complex relationship ...
Discusses the effects of war trauma, particularly posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), on the writi...
This thesis will examine the fictional war novels, The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane and Goi...
The affinities which appear in writing styles of Stephen Crane and manifest themselves in their work...
War is a really common topic, but different authors treat it differently. We see this in Hemingway a...
Relates Hemingway’s personal experience in war to his fiction, examining the change in writing from ...
Biographical account of the author’s life and works, drawing from his letters and fiction. Extensive...
Clarifies Hemingway’s complicated and conflicted views on war, correcting the popular perception tha...
Collection of reprinted essays by such well-known Hemingway scholars as Jeffrey Meyers, Scott Donald...
The paper Human connection in Red badge of Courage sought to reestablish the notion that humanity su...
Close examination of Hemingway’s view of war through his treatment of medals in “War Medals for Sale...
As an ambulance driver in World War I and a war correspondent in World War II and the Spanish Civil ...
Stephen Crane uses man in war to represent universal man in relation to a naturalistic universe. The...
This article discusses perceptions of World War II in modern American literature. Authors acknowledg...
Discusses the psychological effects of World War I and the interim war period on Hemingway and his w...
Comparison study. Draws on John Limon’s theories of war literature to show the complex relationship ...
Discusses the effects of war trauma, particularly posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), on the writi...
This thesis will examine the fictional war novels, The Red Badge of Courage by Stephen Crane and Goi...
The affinities which appear in writing styles of Stephen Crane and manifest themselves in their work...
War is a really common topic, but different authors treat it differently. We see this in Hemingway a...
Relates Hemingway’s personal experience in war to his fiction, examining the change in writing from ...
Biographical account of the author’s life and works, drawing from his letters and fiction. Extensive...
Clarifies Hemingway’s complicated and conflicted views on war, correcting the popular perception tha...
Collection of reprinted essays by such well-known Hemingway scholars as Jeffrey Meyers, Scott Donald...
The paper Human connection in Red badge of Courage sought to reestablish the notion that humanity su...
Close examination of Hemingway’s view of war through his treatment of medals in “War Medals for Sale...
As an ambulance driver in World War I and a war correspondent in World War II and the Spanish Civil ...
Stephen Crane uses man in war to represent universal man in relation to a naturalistic universe. The...
This article discusses perceptions of World War II in modern American literature. Authors acknowledg...
Discusses the psychological effects of World War I and the interim war period on Hemingway and his w...