Impressions of war : the private propaganda of Ford Madox Ford and Virginia Woolf : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in English at Massey University, Manawatū, New Zealand

dc.contributor.authorAnderson, Miranda
dc.date.accessioned2020-03-03T20:17:45Z
dc.date.available2020-03-03T20:17:45Z
dc.date.issued2018
dc.description.abstractIn this thesis I will explore the relationship between modernist fiction, the world wars, and British war propaganda, with its foundational distinction between soldier and civilian experience. This exploration will focus on the novels of two modernist authors who seem to fall on either side of this distinction: Ford Madox Ford, a soldier, veteran, and propagandist, and Virginia Woolf, a self-proclaimed anti-war civilian. Existing scholarship on Ford and Woolf has served to reinforce British war propaganda’s guiding distinction between experience on the war front and the home front by examining Woolf as an apolitical female civilian and Ford as a conventional soldier writer. However, this binary fails to acknowledge the full spectrum of war experience, which unfolds both on the front and at home in similar ways, resonating in the lives of both soldier and civilian figures within and beyond fiction. This thesis examines these resonances and challenges existing critical accounts of Ford and Woolf through a comparative representational analysis of Ford’s The Good Soldier (1915) and Parade’s End (1924-28), and Woolf’s Mrs. Dalloway (1925) and Between the Acts (1941), revealing that these novels challenge the state-sanctioned opposition between soldier and civilian experiences. Through the analysis of three “formal-experiential constellations” central to these novels—cyclical temporality, fragmentation, and stream of consciousness—I will argue that Ford and Woolf’s fictional representations of war experience, and the modernist devices they use to capture these experiences, serve both to evoke the lived experience of war, and to undermine the false propagandist model of war experience. Together, these devices communicate a model of war experience that more closely aligns with a lived experience that is often cyclical, fragmentary, and intersubjective. In this process they create a pluralistic, shared, and distinctly modernist vision of war: a kind of private propaganda.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10179/15236
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherMassey Universityen_US
dc.rightsThe Authoren_US
dc.subjectFord, Ford Madox, 1873-1939en_US
dc.subjectWoolf, Virginia, 1882-1941en_US
dc.subjectCriticism and interpretationen_US
dc.subjectEnglish fictionen_US
dc.subject20th centuryen_US
dc.subjectHistory and criticismen_US
dc.subjectWar and literatureen_US
dc.subjectEnglanden_US
dc.subjectWorld War, 1914-1918en_US
dc.subjectWorld War, 1939-1945en_US
dc.subjectLiterature and the waren_US
dc.subjectWar in literatureen_US
dc.titleImpressions of war : the private propaganda of Ford Madox Ford and Virginia Woolf : a thesis presented in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Master of Arts in English at Massey University, Manawatū, New Zealanden_US
dc.typeThesisen_US
massey.contributor.authorAnderson, Miranda
thesis.degree.disciplineEnglishen_US
thesis.degree.levelMastersen_US
thesis.degree.nameMaster of Arts (MA)en_US
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