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Research Articles

Is Wilfred Owen’s “Anthem for Doomed Youth” an Anti-Elegy? A Comparison with Thomas Gray’s “Elegy Written in a Country Church Yard”

Pages 6-9 | Published online: 09 Apr 2024
 
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Correction

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Correction Statement

This article was originally published with errors, which have now been corrected in the online version. Please see Correction (http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00144940.2024.2361213)

Notes

1 For example, Sandra M. Gilbert talks about the “historically consolatory genre of the elegy” (189).

2 Compare also Nils Clausson’s assessment: “[T]he traditional elegy and sonnet could no longer represent the truth of modern, mechanized war. They had to be either modernized or abandoned… . In ‘Anthem for Doomed Youth,’ Owen is not rejecting the sonnet and the elegy but modernizing them. And he modernizes the poetic tradition antiphonally; that is, he responds to it—and against it …” (169). This essay argues that he also responded with it.

3 Peter M. Sacks has also drawn attention to “the contemptuous lines referring to varieties of useless sound” (134).

4 Ramazani briefly notes the similarity to Gray’s “lowing herd” (71), but does not pursue the connection.

5 For the antiphonal character of the anthem, see Clausson, “Owen’s Antiphonal Response to Tradition.”

6 See Joshua Scodel’s The English Poetic Epitaph for further discussion of the “need for a sensitive reader” (320).

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