ABSTRACT

In the opening section of these related studies of modern literature, Bernard Bergonzi considers the poetry and fiction of two World Wars, including discussions of Wilfred Owen, Richard Aldington’s Death of a Hero, Pat Barker’s Regeneration, and the poetry of the Desert War of the 1940s. The second section deals with a number of prominent twentieth-century authors. Among other subjects, it looks at Ford Madox Ford’s The Good Soldier as a novel anticipating the Great War, the treatment of memory in Orwell’s Nineteen Eighty-Four, and aspects of the poetry of T.S. Eliot, responding to arguments about its anti-semitism. The final section is on Catholic writers, from Hopkins and Chesterton to Graham Greene and David Lodge. The book continues Bergonzi’s extensive career as a critic and literary historian of the modern period, and takes a fresh look at the subjects of some of the earlier books, such as Hopkins, Eliot, Wells, and the literature of war.

part |2 pages

Writers and War

chapter 1|12 pages

Regeneration: Pat Barker's Trilogy

chapter 2|5 pages

Poet's Novels: Richard Aldington and H.D.

chapter 3|9 pages

The Great War and Modern Criticism

chapter 4|21 pages

Poetry of the Desert War

chapter 5|3 pages

Drummond Allison, 1921-43

chapter 6|8 pages

Roy Fuller in Wartime

part |2 pages

Modern Masters

chapter 7|9 pages

Fresh Wells

chapter 9|8 pages

Aldous Huxley and Aunt Mary

chapter 10|17 pages

Eliot's Cities

chapter 11|10 pages

Eliot, Julius and the Jews

chapter 12|15 pages

Time and Memory in Nineteen Eighty-Four

part |2 pages

Catholics

chapter 13|18 pages

Hopkins the Englishman

chapter 14|10 pages

Hopkins, Tradition and the Individual Talent

chapter 15|7 pages

The Other Mrs Ward

chapter 16|17 pages

Chesterton's First Novel

chapter 17|12 pages

David Jones and the Idea of Art

chapter 18|6 pages

Graham Greene at Eighty

chapter 19|6 pages

A Conversation with David Lodge