Regeneration - Wilfred Owen
- Created by: kat1301
- Created on: 14-04-18 23:54
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- Wilfred Owen
- Poetry
- 'They're not about the war.'
- 'I've always thought of poetry as the opposite of all that. The ugliness'.
- When Owen reads poetry he doesn't stammer.
- Owen's way of dealing with the trauma.
- 'A hundred years from now they'll still be ploughing up skulls'.
- We are the people 100 years later.
- WW1 poetry was subverting the norm.
- 'Having a faith that daren't face the facts'.
- Barker uses examples of Owen's poetry throughout the novel.
- Sarah at the amputee ward.
- 'Trouser legs sewn short; empty sleeves pinned to jackets'.
- Intertextuality
- Disabled - 'legless, sewn short at elbow.'
- Intertextuality
- 'Trouser legs sewn short; empty sleeves pinned to jackets'.
- Sarah at the amputee ward.
- 'They're not about the war.'
- Owen and Sassoon
- Sassoon encourages Owen to write about the war in his poetry
- 'I wondered if you'd b-be k-kind enough to s-sign them?'
- Owen admires Sassoon.
- Sassoon edited Owen's poetry
- Anthem for Doomed Youth.
- Sassoon's paternal role
- 'Take care' 'and you'.
- When Sassoon leaves Craiglockhart he doesn't say goodbye.
- '[Owen] was afraid to measure his sense of loss'.
- The hole Sassoon has created in Owen's life by leaving.
- Didn't want to say goodbye? Couldn't?
- '[Owen] was afraid to measure his sense of loss'.
- When Sassoon leaves Craiglockhart he doesn't say goodbye.
- 'Take care' 'and you'.
- When Sassoon leaves Craiglockhart he doesn't say goodbye.
- '[Owen] was afraid to measure his sense of loss'.
- The hole Sassoon has created in Owen's life by leaving.
- Didn't want to say goodbye? Couldn't?
- '[Owen] was afraid to measure his sense of loss'.
- Poetry
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