ISBN: HB: 9781849042895

Hurst Publishers

February 2014

320 pp.

21,6x13,8 cm

HB:
27.50 GBP
QTY:

Categories:

Men at War

What Fiction Tells us About Conflict, From the Iliad to Catch-22

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Since Achilles first stormed into our imagination, literature has introduced its readers to truly unforgettable martial characters. In "Men at War" Christopher Coker discusses some of the most famous of these fictional creations and their impact on our understanding of war and masculinity. Grouped into five archetypes – warriors, heroes, villains, survivors and victims – these characters range across 3000 years of history, through epic poems, the modern novel and one of the twentieth century's most famous film scripts.

Great authors like Homer and Tolstoy reveal to us aspects of reality invisible except through a literary lens, while fictional characters such as Achilles, Falstaff, Robert Jordan and Jack Aubrey are not just larger than life, they are life's largeness; and this is why we seek them out. Although the Greeks knew that the lovers, wives and mothers of soldiers are the chief victims of battle, for combatants war is a masculine pursuit. Each of Coker's chapters explores what fiction tells us about war's hold on the imagination of young men and the way it makes – and breaks – them. War's existential appeal is also perhaps best conveyed in fictional accounts, and this too is scrutinised.

About the author

Christopher Coker is Professor of International Relations at the London School of Economics. He is the author of "Barbarous Philosophers: Reflections on the Nature of War from Heraclitus to Heisenberg"; "Warrior Geeks"; and "Men At War: What Fiction Tells Us About Conflict, From Achilles to Flashman", all of which are published by Hurst.