Understanding the Literature of World War II: A Student Casebook to Issues, Sources, and Historical Documents
By (Author) James H. Meredith
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Greenwood Press
30th June 1999
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
General and world history
Second World War
Modern warfare
810.9358
Hardback
272
With insightful analysis, factual contextual information, and illuminating historical documents, this book provides a detailed, but broad perspective on the most destructive event in history. The literature analyzed in this book includes that of novelists and poets such as Joseph Heller, Norman Mailer, Irwin Shaw, Kurt Vonnegut, William Styron, Richard Wilbur, James Dickey, Paul West, and Bette Green. Along with interviews with these literary luminaries that personalize the war and help to make connections between the literature and the actual experiences of those involved, Meredith also provides rare historical documents that enhance the reader's understanding of the military and political strategies of the major forces of the war. Each chapter provides a literary analysis of the most relevant literature for students on the topic of that chapter, followed by a historical overview of the aspect of the war that will aid the student to understand the historical context of the literature. Primary documents, especially interviews and memoirs, will help students to build bridges between history and the fictional accounts they read. Each chapter is followed by topics and questions for class discussion, suggestions for student papers, and a selected bibliography. This comprehensive casebook will be valuable for interdisciplinary study of World War II and the literature most frequently taught in high school English and history classes.
[T]his work succeeds admirably in presenting complex historical and cultural events in a comprehensive format.-Choice
I recommend Meredith's casebook for anyone who teaches at the high school or college level and is looking for provocative material to engage students with literature--and not just the literature of WWII. While the focus of Meredith's book is WWII, the literature he covers has a larger, timeless vision....Understanding the Litertarure of World War II distills the war's complexities into ideas the students can apply to their own WWII connections, and ultimately to the world they are already inheriting.-War, Literature & The Arts
Meredith...helps the reader to make connections between the literature and the actual experiences for those involved. Astutely edited and thoroughly readable.-The Herald (Columbia, SC)
[T]his book should be on your shelf.- School Library Journal
[T]his book should be on your shelf.-School Library Journal
[T]his book should be on your shelf.School Library Journal
"This book should be on your shelf."-School Library Journal
"This work succeeds admirably in presenting complex historical and cultural events in a comprehensive format."-Choice
"[T]his book should be on your shelf."-School Library Journal
"[T]his work succeeds admirably in presenting complex historical and cultural events in a comprehensive format."-Choice
"Meredith...helps the reader to make connections between the literature and the actual experiences for those involved. Astutely edited and thoroughly readable."-The Herald (Columbia, SC)
"I recommend Meredith's casebook for anyone who teaches at the high school or college level and is looking for provocative material to engage students with literature--and not just the literature of WWII. While the focus of Meredith's book is WWII, the literature he covers has a larger, timeless vision....Understanding the Litertarure of World War II distills the war's complexities into ideas the students can apply to their own WWII connections, and ultimately to the world they are already inheriting."-War, Literature & The Arts
JAMES H. MEREDITH is Associate Professor of English at the United States Air Force Academy. He is also an Associate and Book Review Editor for War, Literature and the Arts: An International Journal of the Humanities, and has served as Guest Editor as well. He has published on Ernest Hemingway, Ambrose Bierce, Stephen Crane, and war literature. He is currently working on several book-length projects, including one on Joseph Heller's fiction, which will be published in 1999.