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    Regeneration By Pat Barker

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    what Pat Barker does that makes her anti-war argument so effective. She uses techniques of setting‚ characterisation‚ relationships between characters and their different perspectives to convey her anti-war message. She shows you the blisters. Regeneration is based on historical facts. Barker sets her novel in Craiglockhart‚ a real life building located in Edinburgh‚ Scotland that was used as a war hospital in World War 1 (1916-1919) to treat officers suffering from various levels of war neurosis

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    Regeneration by Pat Barker is a novel about a mental hospital for soldiers psychologically injured on the front line. It is unlike other novels and plays such as journey’s End by R.C. Sherriff which tells the story of front-line battle. The ways in which the war has had an effect on the soldiers is explored in great detail by Barker‚ perhaps to show that the effect the war has had on the characters‚ somehow has become part of their personality. A theme that Barker also explores is the theme of silence

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    patients in Ward Fourteen behave. Even though the ward is overcrowded with injured men‚ they are still happy. Sarah felt like "the object of amused appreciation from all parts of the ward" meaning the men were still the same as they were before going into war; young men out to get girls’ attention. Relief is also seen through Madge when she inspects her injured lover and see that he still has his arms and legs. Although in some parts there are feelings of panic and nervousness‚ which is experienced by

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    How does Barker present the effects of war on men? In the novel RegenerationPat Barker examines how the war altered and affected the men involved. Throughout the book‚ she explores how the horrific experiences of the war caused breakdown and mental illness for many soldiers by including characters that display a number of different neuroses. As well as this she closely looks at relationships and how they were altered over the course of the war. The most prominent way Barker presents the effects

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    How does Barker convey Burns’ experience/regeneration in Chapter 4? The extract opens with Burns standing by the window‚ looking out on a bleak and depressing landscape‚ “sky and hills together in a wash of grey.” The pathetic fallacy reflects on Burns’ mood; downcast‚ depressed. He feels the need to escape; but is trapped. A sense of darkness and connotations of conflict seem to surround him‚ both outside‚ in the form of the stormy weather‚ and inside the hospital in the form of the crowded room

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    embrace it. Pat Barker reveals this theme not only to our general lives but to those of soldiers facing war neurosis in WWI. Her novel‚ Regeneration‚ portrays the various characters’ struggles with combating the effects of war neurosis at the psych ward‚ Craiglockhart. Through escape‚ homosexuality‚ and the striving for masculinity‚ the responses of three major characters‚ Siegfried Sassoon‚ Dr. W.H.R. Rivers‚ and Billy Prior‚ are examined to show their struggles toward the traumas of World War I. Each

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    Regeneration by Pat Barker is a novel placed in the midst of the first World War‚ revolving around the life of a psychiatrist‚ named Rivers‚ and the lives of his patients: soldiers who have left the war yet who have not escaped its’ horror. ‘Regeneration’ is “ the act or process of coming back‚ growing anew or a spiritual rebirth.”. Throughout “Regeneration”‚ Pat Barker reflects the title’s meaning through the themes of Duty‚ Parenthood and Mental and Physical Healing that encompass her book.

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    Suffering‚ in the novel Regeneration‚ is presented as painful and extensive inner conflict that is present in individual patients subjected to treatment in Craiglockhart. Sassoon stated‚ “It was like being 3 different people and they all wanted to go different ways”. This highlights the fact that Sassoon is at war with himself‚ as he does not know which path to take due to his mind set on different objectives. It also shows confusion and misunderstanding‚ much like a child‚ this can show demasculinisation

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    How does Pat Barker use symbolism in the novel Regeneration to explore the theme of emasculation? The theme emasculation appears several times throughout the novel Regeneration in variety of forms. Barker’s exploration of emasculation in the novel challenges traditional notions of manliness‚ showing war as a possible “feminine” experience. Pat Barker is bringing to attention that the atrocities suffered at war are making the soldiers unmanly as they’re facing shell shock and trauma. There are many

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    Regenerating Relationships A look at character connections in Regeneration by Pat Barker Throughout Regeneration by Pat Barker there are intricate connections being made between the characters. The relationships between patients‚ doctors‚ and soldiers cross over many lines forming complicated bonds that go beyond those of friendships and father figures. The gender roles in this wartime tale do not follow normal social rules. There are strong‚ dominant females that compensate for the effeminate

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