Word: owen
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Dates: during 1970-1979
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From this general framework--we'll call it the Great War Syndrome--Fussell proceeds to explore some of its various manifestations, and the writers who were closest to its center. Writers like Siegfried Sassoon and Wilfred Owen, he suggests, employed traditional literary terms to evoke the "actualities" of war. Sunsets and sunrises, rising out of the Pastoral, take on a new and heightened significance in the trenches when used to describe the stand-to--a rite in which everybody on the front line took up arms and stood ready for the attacks that came at dawn or dusk...
FUSSELL'S BOOK--and I've only giving you a pale chill compared to the frisson you get reading it--leaves you with a sense of an entire social construct arising out of the Great War. He carefully analyzes the major war-related works of Sassoon, Owen, Robert Graves, David Jones, and Edmund Blunden, to show how they created the new ironic form of cognition World War I bestowed upon our culture...
...think they're any better than we are," senior Peter Owen said. "We were disappointed, but we're not disheartened...
Harvard's next game is at Princeton on Friday, "Perenially they're not too good," Owen said...
...Association of Independent Colleges and Universities of Massachusetts has filed a class-action suit in the Suffoll County Superior Court against the Commission on Corporations and Taxation. Owen Clarke, the Commissioner of Corporations and Taxation, ruled in September that college board contracts should be treated like meals bought in restaurants and be subject to the meal...