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Selected Letters of Wilfred Owen

Potter

$55.95

Hardback

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English
Oxford University Press
31 August 2023
This new, select edition of Wilfred Owen's letters provides a fresh understanding of the poet's life in his own words.

Wilfred Owen's fame as one of the great war poets of the twentieth century is unsurpassed, with Dulce et Decorum est possibly the defining piece of World War literature.

Owen's letters reveal the man behind the cultural icon; human with all his foibles, whose 25 years were marked by great highs and lows, by emerging modernity, and the violence of war. Evocative, lyrical, and often surprisingly funny, the letters act as both autobiography and companion to the famous war poems. He was both an accomplished poet and one of the finest letter-writers of the twentieth century.

Accompanied by new notes and new introduction, as well as previously redacted and omitted material, the new edition of Owen's Selected Letters brings together past and contemporary scholarship to provide fresh insights into Owen's character and poetic development.

Edited by:  
Imprint:   Oxford University Press
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 240mm,  Width: 160mm,  Spine: 25mm
Weight:   1g
ISBN:   9780199689507
ISBN 10:   0199689504
Pages:   464
Publication Date:  
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Introduction Selected Bibliography Abbreviations List of Illustrations Biographical Table Shrewsbury and Dunsden: 1902-1913 Bordeaux, the Pyrenees, and Mérignac: 1913-1915 The Artists' Rifles and Training: 1915-1916 The Somme and Craiglockhart: 1917 Scarborough and the Return to France: 1918 Appendix A: My Dear Old Wolf by Harold Owen Appendix B: Locations of Owen's Manuscripts Index

Dr Jane Potter is Reader in Arts at Oxford Brookes University and teaches Publishing courses in the School of Arts. Her research focuses on the literature of the First World War and book history. Her publications include Boys in Khaki, Girls in Print: Women's Literary Responses to the Great War, 1914-1918 (Oxford University Press, 2005), Three Poets of the First World War: Ivor Gurney, Isaac Rosenberg and Wilfred Owen, eds. Jon Stallworthy & Jane Potter (Penguin Classics, 2011), Wilfred Owen: An Illustrated Life (Bodleian Library Publishing, 2014), and, with Carol Acton, Working in a World of Hurt: Trauma and Resilience in the Narratives of Medical Personnel in War Zones (Manchester University Press, 2015). She is also editor of A Cambridge History of World War One Poetry (Cambridge University Press).

Reviews for Selected Letters of Wilfred Owen

Although Wilfred Owen wrote most of his surviving letters to one person - his mother - they show all facets of his personality as well as its remarkable focus. Reading this well-judged selection, which restores some previously redacted material, we see an impressionable literary adolescent turning into a clear-eyed war poet, while at the same time being reminded that his mental development was driven by intense personal feeling. This is what makes Owen a major letter-writer as well as a major poet. His heart and his head always marched in step with one another. * Andrew Motion * This Selected Letters, some 345 letters in total, is the most insightful and accurate edition of the letters that we have had yet. Building on the earlier editorial work of John Bell, Jane Potter has served Owen with care and affection, and with much expertise and wisdom. Anyone who loves Owen's poetry will want to own his Selected Letters. * Guy Cuthbertson, Professor of British Literature and Culture, and Head of the School of Humanities Liverpool Hope University * With this remarkable new edition, Owen has grown even younger in years. What this authoritative and loving selection, coupled with Potter's astute Introduction and notes, reveals is not just the iconic 'war poet' or the 'voice of pity' but a man incorrigibly plural - funny, fun-loving, wry, mischievous, tender, sharply observant, occasionally insecure, vulnerable, sensuous, conflicted, wonderfully warm, and endlessly creatives with language. Blurring the boundaries between life-writing, testament and epitaph, this selection not only places him among the finest letter-writers in British literary history but serves, along with the poems, as the perfect introduction to Owen for the twenty-first century reader. * Santanu Das, Professor of English and Senior Research Fellow, All Saints College Oxford University * Owen's letters ...are a deeply moving supplement to his poems. * Daniel Swift, The Spectator * [T]hese letters reveal an affectionate, humorous, even mischievous character, eager for learning and experiences who, let's face it, lived and achieved more in his 25 years than most of us, now, could manage in 100. * Jacqueline Riding, Country Life * Potter's Selected Letters tells, in extraordinary detail, the combined story of an artist's growth and a world-changing historical moment. * Ben Philipps, The Tablet * [A]n excellent introduction to the man who fully deserves a place at the forefront of the war poets' pantheon. * Caroline Barrett, Stand To! *


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