Relating Ø/to/in the desert: Scottish World War II Poets in North Africa and the Middle-East

“Relating” meaning both recounting and connecting, it is a suitable term to describe war literature which is, at the same time, aesthetic and testimonial. Scottish poets were sent to the African front during the Second World War and their poems, letters or diaries reflect their experience in Egypt,...

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Main Author: Stéphanie NOIRARD
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA) 2022-06-01
Series:E-REA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/erea/13580
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author Stéphanie NOIRARD
author_facet Stéphanie NOIRARD
author_sort Stéphanie NOIRARD
collection DOAJ
description “Relating” meaning both recounting and connecting, it is a suitable term to describe war literature which is, at the same time, aesthetic and testimonial. Scottish poets were sent to the African front during the Second World War and their poems, letters or diaries reflect their experience in Egypt, Libya and Tunisia, offering sharp contrasts with what is commonly believed or imagined of desert landscapes and the Desert War. The aim of this article is to examine how Scottish war poems may be inscribed in an artistic as well as a historical counter-discourse. The first part is a historical and cultural survey which contextualizes life and literary relationship in Cairo at the time, while evoking the main literary landmarks poets might have called up as they faced desert landscapes. The second part analyzes how they related to or broke away from these landmarks to relate their desert experience, with particular focus being set on the poem as a silent camera obscura. The last part turns to human landscapes and examines relationship within the 8th Army and the strong affinities Scottish poets felt towards German simple soldiers or North African civilians.
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spelling doaj-art-6fe1e9be87084a67ba602cb1acfe55972025-01-09T12:53:51ZengLaboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)E-REA1638-17182022-06-0119210.4000/erea.13580Relating Ø/to/in the desert: Scottish World War II Poets in North Africa and the Middle-EastStéphanie NOIRARD“Relating” meaning both recounting and connecting, it is a suitable term to describe war literature which is, at the same time, aesthetic and testimonial. Scottish poets were sent to the African front during the Second World War and their poems, letters or diaries reflect their experience in Egypt, Libya and Tunisia, offering sharp contrasts with what is commonly believed or imagined of desert landscapes and the Desert War. The aim of this article is to examine how Scottish war poems may be inscribed in an artistic as well as a historical counter-discourse. The first part is a historical and cultural survey which contextualizes life and literary relationship in Cairo at the time, while evoking the main literary landmarks poets might have called up as they faced desert landscapes. The second part analyzes how they related to or broke away from these landmarks to relate their desert experience, with particular focus being set on the poem as a silent camera obscura. The last part turns to human landscapes and examines relationship within the 8th Army and the strong affinities Scottish poets felt towards German simple soldiers or North African civilians.https://journals.openedition.org/erea/13580silencecamera obscuraorientalismAnglo-Scottish relationsGeorge Campbell HayNorman Cameron Norman
spellingShingle Stéphanie NOIRARD
Relating Ø/to/in the desert: Scottish World War II Poets in North Africa and the Middle-East
E-REA
silence
camera obscura
orientalism
Anglo-Scottish relations
George Campbell Hay
Norman Cameron Norman
title Relating Ø/to/in the desert: Scottish World War II Poets in North Africa and the Middle-East
title_full Relating Ø/to/in the desert: Scottish World War II Poets in North Africa and the Middle-East
title_fullStr Relating Ø/to/in the desert: Scottish World War II Poets in North Africa and the Middle-East
title_full_unstemmed Relating Ø/to/in the desert: Scottish World War II Poets in North Africa and the Middle-East
title_short Relating Ø/to/in the desert: Scottish World War II Poets in North Africa and the Middle-East
title_sort relating o to in the desert scottish world war ii poets in north africa and the middle east
topic silence
camera obscura
orientalism
Anglo-Scottish relations
George Campbell Hay
Norman Cameron Norman
url https://journals.openedition.org/erea/13580
work_keys_str_mv AT stephanienoirard relatingøtointhedesertscottishworldwariipoetsinnorthafricaandthemiddleeast