- War poet
The term "war poet" came into currency during and after
World War I . A number ofpoet s writing in English had been soldiers, and had written about their experiences of war. Quite a number had died, most famouslyRupert Brooke ,Isaac Rosenberg ,Wilfred Owen , andCharles Sorley . Others such asSiegfried Sassoon had survived, but made a reputation based on scathing poetry written from the disabused point of view of the trench soldier who had lost faith in his military superiors.At the time the term "soldier poet" was also used, but then dropped out of favour. The evolution of the concept was connected to a distinction drawn, between poets who were anti-war in attitude, and more traditional war poetry.
World War I
There was probably as much poetry of quality written on the German side of the
Western Front ; but it was inEnglish poetry , such as that ofWilfred Owen , that the war poem became an established "genre " marker and attracted growing popular interest. Americans and Canadians contributed notable work (John McCrae wrote "In Flanders Fields " which is on the Canadian $10 bill); the French had their own war poetry, too, as did the Italians, most notably inGiuseppe Ungaretti . According to Patrick Bridgwater in "The German Poets of the First World War", the closest comparison to Owen would beAnton Schnack ; and Schnack's only peer would beAugust Stramm .It is perhaps not a well-defined question, what makes a war poet (compare, say, Brooke and
Georg Trakl ). The public may have seen war poems asreportage and direct emotional links to the soldier.Robert H. Ross ["The Georgian Revolt", p.166.] characterises 'war poets' as a subgroup of the "
Georgian Poetry " writers: those who were in uniform (including thereforeRobert Graves ,Isaac Rosenberg , Robert Nichols,Wilfred Owen andSiegfried Sassoon ).Robert Graves served in the trenches and survived, David Jones also; Graves did not use war experience as poetic material (making it
autobiography in "Goodbye to All That "), or, more accurately, later suppressed what he had made of it; and Jones postponed its use, incorporating it into modernist forms. These and otherWWI poets are listed here: .panish Civil War
The
Spanish Civil War produced a substantial volume of poetry in English and, of course, Spanish too, and other languages — there were English-speaking poets serving on both sides.World War II
By the time of
World War II the role of 'war poet' was so well-established in the public mind that 'where are the war poets?' became a topic of discussion. The "Times Literary Supplement " ran aneditorial 'To the Poets of 1940' right at the end of 1939 (still during thephony war , therefore). Robert Graves gave a radio talk 'Why has this War produced no War Poets?' in October 1941.Stephen Spender also replied at about the same time,T. S. Eliot a year later.Alun Lewis andKeith Douglas are the standard critical choices amongst British war poets of that time, andKarl Shapiro made a reputation based on poetry written during the Pacific war; there was probably more heavyweight poetry written in French from 1939-1945, than in English. The reason may be to do with the onward march of technology and the fact that soldiers spent less of their time sitting in trenches waiting for something to happen.The expectation of war poetry can be noted in a character from the
C. S. Forester novel "The Ship" who is a poet serving in a Royal Navy ship in the Mediterranean around 1942, and who is killed in action.Benjamin Britten 's "War Requiem " made use of war poem texts, as doesRobert Steadman 's "In Memoriam". In Britten's Requiem are interspersed among the latin texts some poems byWilfred Owen .Vietnam
Jay Nemeth 's debut collection, "War of Vietnam", won the 1972Yale Younger Poets Award . The collection's various vignettes use colloquial speech to document a soldier's experience in Vietnam. It was the first collection of poems to emerge from the war.Later wars
There has been little recognition of war poetry from any subsequent conflict, certainly when compared with novels. That is not to say, at all, that such conflicts have not affected poets and what they write.
References
*
Jon Silkin (1972), "Out of Battle: The Poetry of the Great War"Notes
External links
* [http://www.st-andrews.ac.uk/~www_se/personal/pvm/HardyBWar/poetry.html The Poetry of the Boer War]
* [http://www.warpoemsfromiraq.com/ War Poems From Iraq]
* [http://www.warpoets.org/ War Poets Association]
* [http://www.oucs.ox.ac.uk/ww1lit/ The First World War Poetry Digital Archive]
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