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War Literature II

Blackfriars, 1941
Is Britain’s frontier on the Rhine or on the Straits of Dover? Since July, 1940, this question has been a poignant one. It has a more than military significance, however, for it comports great moral issues, the duty or indifference which Britain owes to the Continent of Europe.
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War Literature

Contemporary Literature, 1980
Thomas Mallon, Andrew Rutherford
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Soviet War Literature

University of Toronto Quarterly, 1944
The development of Soviet literature over the last twenty-five years is as heroic and self-sacrificing a story as the development of Soviet industry. Writers underwent nearly every conceivable vicissitude: they suffered cold and hunger in the early days; they were afflicted with one period of severe regimentation during the first Five-Year Plan, and ...
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War and Literature

2009
Before the industrial revolution writers described imaginary societies as a way of criticising their own. The genre was named after the visionary polis conceived by the 16th-century statesman and writer, Thomas More. His Utopians loathed war and never fought except when they were attacked or their citizens and others were mistreated overseas.
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Literature and War

Poetics Today, 1990
Tamar Hager, David Bevan
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War and Literature

2022
J. A. Hobson, Morris Ginsberg
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