第一次世界大戦と戦争詩人 トマス・ハーディからアイザック・ローゼンバーグまで(3)

書誌事項

タイトル別名
  • The First World War and the English War Poets: From Thomas Hardy to Issac Rosenberg(3)
  • 第1次世界大戦と戦争詩人--トマス・ハーディからアイザック・ローゼンバーグまで-3-
  • ダイ 1ジ セカイ タイセン ト センソウ シジン トマス ハーディ カラ ア

この論文をさがす

説明

Charles Hamilton Sorley (1895--1915) was one of the most baffling poets who actually experienced the horror and excitement of the early phase of World War I. He was only twenty he was made a captain in August 1915 but on October 13 was killed in action in the Battle of Loos.\nCorresponding to his at times conflicting views of Germany and England, Sorley's war poems and letters reflect two different attributes of his artistic nature, which combine to characterize him as a "transitional" war poet. He simulataneously presents a two-sided view of the war until his death: one a romantic preoccupation and glorification of the conflict, and the other a strong disillusionment with, and vehement protest against, the waste, madness, and horror of the war. However, curiously enough, these two different attitudes do not seem to conflict but merely coexist within Sorley's mind like the conspicuously patterned stripes on a zebra. He did not need to find the strength to resolve his different views because they did not represent any real threat to his artistic integrity. Thus, it is safe to say that he had established a position as a tranditional poet between those who favored the war such as Rupert Brooke and those who abhored it as Wilfred Owen did.

紀要論文

収録刊行物

詳細情報 詳細情報について

問題の指摘

ページトップへ