- Title
- "I m not sick," I said. "I m wounded": Disrupting Wounded Masculinity through the Lyrical Spaces of War
- Author/Creator
- Cheryl Hindrichs
- Publication Details
- Affective Materialities: Reorienting the Body in Modernist Literature, pp.79-102
- Annotation
- Hindrichs distinguishes between sickness and wounds in the literature of World War I, focusing on the intersection of illness and gender in A Farewell to Arms and Dos Passos s Three Soldiers (1921). Argues that the authors ambivalence toward illness enables their construction of male protagonists capable of critiquing the oppression of masculine hierarchy but ultimately incapable of overcoming it. Determines that doctors in hospitals have the effect of feminizing patients, and it is through this feminization that an alternative masculinity can be pursued. Considers the implications of both authors evocation of the pastoral and romantic genres in their modernist narratives of war trauma.
- Academic Unit
- Hemingway Bibliography
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Book chapter
- Record Identifier
- 991015132154103691
Book chapter
"I m not sick," I said. "I m wounded": Disrupting Wounded Masculinity through the Lyrical Spaces of War
Affective Materialities: Reorienting the Body in Modernist Literature, pp.79-102
2019
Appears in Hemingway Bibliography
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