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Writing War: Fiction, Gender, and Memory

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The narratives in Writing War displace the soldier as the mouthpiece of war, reminding the reader that the makers of war are not its only victims. These stories assume that women, children, noncombatants, and the enemy have an experience of war as much worth telling and remembering as is the story of any soldier. And the stories insist on the links between men and women at war, men and women in books, and men and women at work, play, home, and in bed. These stories demonstrate how the ideas explored speculatively in the essays on war literature permeate the air we breathe and inform the lives we lead.

168 pages, Paperback

First published May 1, 1991

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Lynne Hanley

2 books

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Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews
Profile Image for David.
1,468 reviews39 followers
June 30, 2021
2.49 GOODREADS stars. Read selected parts only -- probably most of the book. Nothing earth-shattering here -- just feminist criticism of male war literature.
Profile Image for Linshan Jiang.
13 reviews1 follower
July 8, 2021
I like the discussion on Virginia Woolf about gender and war.
Displaying 1 - 2 of 2 reviews