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09/30/21 Writing and the Great War - Q3010 - Alistair Davies | Sussex University Writing and the Great War - Q3010 - View Online Alistair Davies 1. Barker, P.: Regeneration. Penguin, London (2008). 2. Sassoon, Siegfried: Siegfried Sassoon: Collected poems, 1908-1956. Faber, London (1984). 3. The Siegfried Sassoon Collection | First World War Poetry Digital Archive. 4. Sassoon, Siegfried: Memoirs of an infantry officer. Faber, London (2000). 5. Stallworthy, Jon: Survivors’ songs: from Maldon to the Somme. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008). 6. Bogacz, T.: ‘A tyranny of words’ : Language, Poetry and Anti-modernism in England and the First World War. The Journal of Modern History. 58, 643–668 (1986). 1/29 09/30/21 Writing and the Great War - Q3010 - Alistair Davies | Sussex University 7. Campbell, J.S.: ‘For You May Touch Them Not’: Misogyny, Homosexuality, and the Ethics of Passivity in First World War Poetry. ELH. 64, 823–842. 8. Das, S.: ‘Kiss me, Hardy’: Intimacy, Gender and Gesture in World War 1 Trench Literature, (2002). 9. Sherry, Vincent B.: The Cambridge companion to the literature of the First World War. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2005). 10. Fussell, Paul: The Great War and modern memory. Oxford University Press, New York (2000). 11. Fussell, P.: The Great War and modern memory. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2000). 12. Quinn, Patrick J.,, Trout, Steven,: The literature of the Great War reconsidered: beyond modern memory. Palgrave, Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire (2001). 13. Higonnet, Margaret R.: Behind the lines: gender and the two World Wars. Yale University Press, New Haven, Conn (1987). 14. Showalter, E.: The female malady: women, madness, and English culture, 1830-1980. 2/29 09/30/21 Writing and the Great War - Q3010 - Alistair Davies | Sussex University Pantheon, New York, N.Y. (1985). 15. Silkin, Jon.: Out of battle: the poetry of the Great War. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1998). 16. Berberich, Christine: The image of the English gentleman in twentieth-century literature: Englishness and nostalgia. Ashgate, Aldershot, Hampshire, England (2007). 17. Berberich, C.: The image of the English gentleman in twentieth-century literature: Englishness and nostalgia. Ashgate, Aldershot, Hampshire, England (2007). 18. Hemmings, Robert: Modern nostalgia: Siegfried Sassoon, trauma and the Second World War. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (2008). 19. Hemmings, R.: Modern nostalgia: Siegfried Sassoon, trauma and the Second World War. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (2008). 20. Bradshaw, D.: A concise companion to modernism. Blackwell, Oxford (2003). 21. Johnson, P.: Embodying Losses in Pat Barker’s Regeneration Trilogy. Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction. 46, 307–319 (2005). https://doi.org/10.3200/CRIT.46.4.307-319. 22. 3/29 09/30/21 Writing and the Great War - Q3010 - Alistair Davies | Sussex University Harris, G.: Compulsory Masculinity, Britain, and the Great War: The Literary-Historical Work of Pat Barker. Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction. 39, 290–304 (1998). https://doi.org/10.1080/00111619809599537. 23. Shaddock, J.: Dreams of Melanesia: Masculinity and the Exorcism of War in Pat Barker’s The Ghost Road. Modern Fiction Studies. 52, 656–674 (2006). 24. Mukherjee, A.: Stammering to Story: Neurosis and Narration in Pat Barker’s Regeneration. Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction. 43, 49–62 (2001). https://doi.org/10.1080/00111610109602171. 25. Trumpener, K.: Memories Carved in Granite: Great War Memorials and Everyday Life . PMLA. 115, 1096–1103. 26. Winter, J.: Shell-shock and the Cultural History of the Great War. Journal of Contemporary History. 35, 7–11 (2000). https://doi.org/10.1177/002200940003500102. 27. Tew, Philip, Mengham, Rod,: British fiction today. Continuum, London (2006). 28. Acheson, James, Ross, Sarah C. E.: The contemporary British novel. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (2005). 29. Monteith, Sharon: Critical perspectives on Pat Barker. University of South Carolina Press, Columbia, S.C. (2005). 4/29 09/30/21 Writing and the Great War - Q3010 - Alistair Davies | Sussex University 30. Leed, E.J.: Class and Disillusionment in World War I : The Journal of Modern History, Vol. 50, No. 4 (Dec., 1978), pp. 680-699. 31. Walter, George ed: The Penguin book of First World War poetry. Penguin, London (2006). 32. Rupert Brooke: The Old Vicarage, Grantchester. 33. Woolf, Virginia: Jacob’s room. Hogarth P. (1945). 34. Das, S. ed: The Cambridge companion to the poetry of the First World War. Cambridge University Press, New York, N.Y. (2013). 35. Stallworthy, Jon: Survivors’ songs: from Maldon to the Somme. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008). 36. Kramer, Alan: Dynamic of destruction: culture and mass killing in the First World War. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2007). 37. Adams, Michael C. C.: The great adventure: male desire and the coming of World War I. 5/29 09/30/21 Writing and the Great War - Q3010 - Alistair Davies | Sussex University Indiana University Press, Bloomington, Ind (1990). 38. Wohl, R.: The generation of 1914. Weidenfeld, (1980). 39. Hynes, S.: A war imagined: the First World War and English culture. Bodley Head, London (1990). 40. Parker, Peter: The old lie: the Great War and the public-school ethos. Hambledon Continuum, London (2007). 41. Braybon, Gail: Evidence, history, and the Great War: historians and the impact of 1914-18. Berghahn Books, New York, N.Y. (2003). 42. Jaffe, Aaron: Modernism and the culture of celebrity. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2009). 43. Rutherford, Jonathan: Forever England: reflections on race, masculinity and empire. Lawrence & Wishart, London (1997). 44. Field, Frank: British and French writers of the First World War: comparative studies in cultural history. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2008). 6/29 09/30/21 Writing and the Great War - Q3010 - Alistair Davies | Sussex University 45. Ebbatson, Roger: An imaginary England: nation, landscape and literature, 1840-1920. Ashgate Pub, Aldershot, Hants (2005). 46. Summers, A.: Militarism in Britain before the Great War : History Workshop, No. 2 (Autumn, 1976), pp. 104-123. 47. Strachan, Hew: The outbreak of the first world war. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2004). 48. Vandiver, Elizabeth: Stand in the trench, Achilles: classical receptions in British poetry of the Great War. Oxford University Press, Oxford (2010). 49. Blom, Philipp: The vertigo years: change and culture in the West, 1900-1914. Phoenix, London (2009). 50. National World War I Museum at Liberty Memorial: The legacy of the Great War: ninety years on. University of Missouri Press, Columbia (2009). 51. Bowlby, Rachel: Feminist destinations and further essays on Virginia Woolf. Edinburgh University Press, Edinburgh (1997). 52. Goldman, Dorothy: Women and World War 1: the written response. Macmillan, Basingstoke 7/29 09/30/21 Writing and the Great War - Q3010 - Alistair Davies | Sussex University (1993). 53. Marcus, Jane: Virginia Woolf and Bloomsbury: a centenary celebration. Macmillan, Basingstoke (1987). 54. Peach, Linden: Virginia Woolf. St. Martin’s Press, Basingstoke (2000). 55. Minow-Pinkney, Makiko: Virginia Woolf and the problem of the subject. Harvester, Brighton (1987). 56. Hussey, Mark: Virginia Woolf and war: fiction, reality and myth. Syracuse U.P., New York (1991). 57. Froula, Christine: Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury avant-garde. Columbia University Press, Chichester (2007). 58. Atkin, Jonathan: A war of individuals: Bloomsbury attitudes to the Great War. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2002). 59. Atkin, J.: A war of individuals: Bloomsbury attitudes to the Great War. Manchester University Press, Manchester (2002). 8/29 09/30/21 Writing and the Great War - Q3010 - Alistair Davies | Sussex University 60. Rae, Patricia: Modernism and mourning. Bucknell University Press, Cranbury, N.J. (2007). 61. Sherry, Vincent B., MyiLibrary: The Great War and the language of modernism. Oxford University Press, New York (2003). 62. Sherry, V.B.: The Great War and the language of modernism. Oxford University Press, New York, N.Y. (2004). 63. Fraser, J.M.: Be a good soldier: children’s grief in English modernist novels. University of Toronto Press, Toronto [Ont.] (2011). 64. Fraser, J.M.: Be a good soldier: children’s grief in English modernist novels. University of Toronto Press, Toronto (2011). 65. With the guns | 1910-1919 | Guardian Century. 66. The Prussian Officer by D. H. Lawrence - Project Gutenberg. 67. Lawrence, D.H., Worthen, J., Finney, B.: The Prussian officer: and other stories. Penguin Books, London (1995). 9/29 09/30/21 Writing and the Great War - Q3010 - Alistair Davies | Sussex University 68. England, My England by D. H. Lawrence - Project Gutenberg. 69. Lawrence, D.H., Steele, B.: England, my England and other stories. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (1990). 70. ‘Swept And Garnished’ by Rudyard Kipling at Daily Pulp: Classic Stories. 71. My Boy Jack by Rudyard Kipling. 72. Walter, George ed: The Penguin book of First World War poetry. Penguin, London (2006). 73. Cole, Sarah: Modernism, male friendship, and the First World War. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, U.K. (2003). 74. Fernihough, Anne: The Cambridge companion to D.H. Lawrence. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge (2001). 75. Black, Michael H.: Lawrence’s England: the major fiction, 1913-20. Palgrave, Basingstoke (2001). 10/29 09/30/21 Writing and the Great War - Q3010 - Alistair Davies | Sussex University 76. Boone, Joseph Allen: Libidinal currents: sexuality and the shaping