WAR AND AFTERMATH OF WAR IN THE ENGLISH PATIENT BY MICHAEL ONDAATJE Abstract War and aftermath of war is a paper which talks about the various aspects of war and its outcomes as discussed in the novels of Michael Ondaatje. Ondaatje takes war as a major theme in his two most famous novels: The English Patient and Anil’s Ghost. The present paper discusses the treatment of war in the hands of Ondaatje in his Booker winning novel The English Patient. The treatment of the sensitive topics of war gets
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Wilfred Owen was an exceptional poet of his time. His poetry explores the distinctive idea of the physical impacts of the war and the mental impacts of the war. Owen exposes the reality of war using a portrayal of his horrific experiences of the battlefield. He demonstrates his perspective on war by revealing his ideas through his poetry using linguistic sound devices and techniques which is paramount to a genuine understanding of Owen’s distinctive idea and focuses on the impact that the war had
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bitter imagery in a string of similes. Give one example of such a visual imagery‚ gustatory imagery‚ tactile imagery‚ and audial imagery. 10. Why would children be “ardent for some desperate glory”? 11. What is the meaning of the Latin phrase “dulce et decorum est‚ pro patria mori? From what work is this quotation derived? 12. How would the Latin phrase chance in its meaning if we read it without the context of the rest of the poem? 13. Why is the lie an old lie?
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Kind” (Literature and its Writers‚ 1063). Randall Jarrell‚ a poet of the early 19th Century‚ displays his experiences of life and death in the Air Forces in his poem “The Death of the Ball Turret Gunner” (L&W‚ 1065). In Wilfred Owen’s poem “Dulce et Decorum Est” (L&W‚ 1064-1065)‚ he paints a grisly
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that I believe the war inspired many of Wilfred Owen’s poems. He was very dedicated to his country. In fact he even enlisted himself in the military voluntarily. The war had many influences on Wilfred and his poems. For example‚ a quote from Dulce Et Decorum Est “If you could hear‚ at every jolt‚ the blood come gargling from the forth-corrupted lungs obscene as cancer‚ bitter as the cod of vile‚ incurable sores on innocent tongues”‚ this poem he was talking about the gas attacks. I believe that Wilfred
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of that event‚ thus re-writing the history of their personal lives. This same fault can also coincide with the flaws that occur in the documentary evidence of history‚ which influences memory. Doctor Mark Raphael Baker’s narrative text‚ ‘The Fiftieth Gate’‚ reveals the nature of history and memory through his attempts to record his parents’ stories and experiences‚ as Holocaust survivors‚ in order to allow a better understanding of his identity and experience in human history. His particular profession
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In ‘Dulce est Decorum’‚ Wilfred Owen mocks the presentation of war in the public’s eyes. He begins by using the title‚ which translates into an old Latin saying for ‘It is sweet and honourable to die for your country’. However‚ the use of this is very ironic as he proceeds to show how it’s the complete opposite of that. Owen mocks the idea of war that has been set out by authors like John McCrae‚ in the poem‚“Flanders fields”‚ which gives the public a deceptive justification of war. The pugnacious
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home and this home can then be further connected to the country. The idealized concept of an honorable death in war‚ however‚ faded away in the later years of World War I as a grim reality set in. Instead‚ Wilfred Owen demonstrates how the “Dulce et decorum est/Pro patria mori” (It is sweet and fitting to die for one’s country) saying is actually a lie in source 8. He does so by describing a soldier’s gruesome death from gas poisoning. The agony that the solider had gone through‚ such as “white eyes
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Poetry Analysis 1. In stanza one‚ I notice that Wilfred Owen is putting himself in the shoes of soldiers in the war‚ he tends to describe the poor conditions the soldiers were to march in and the constant hours they were forced to stay awake. It is also mentioned that they were in a continuous flee from the bombs that were dropped‚ dropped so close that they became blind‚ deaf‚ and even bloody. In stanza two‚ the fear of the soldiers is continued as poisonous gas is released upon them
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‘’The experience of the Great War stripped men of their masculinity’’explore the ways in which Barker‚ Sassoon and Owen portray this in their writing. Sassoon and Owen as poets and Barker as a novelist‚ explore through their works of literature the changing and challenging notions of masculinity experienced as a result of The Great War. Furthermore‚ all three writers suggest that the often overlooked reality of the conflict was the creation of a subversion of the stereotypical ‘heroic soldier’.
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