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Beyond Heroic Pathos: Trauma, Disillusionment, And the Unmournable Soldier in Irwin Shaw's War Fiction

Husaynova Gulsora Alijon qiziPhD Student at Namangan State University, Uzbekistan
ABI

Аннотация

This article examines Irwin Shaw's Second World War short fiction as a deliberate counter-tradition to the dominant mode of "heroic pathos" in Western war literature. By reading Shaw's stories — particularly "Act of Faith" and "Gunners' Passage" — against the conventions established by Rupert Brooke, Ernest Hemingway, and Stephen Crane, the article argues that Shaw systematically dismantles three central assumptions: that suffering ennobles the soldier, that death constitutes meaningful sacrifice, and that the individual soldier's experience aligns with a national or moral purpose. Shaw's formal strategies — ironic understatement, structural incompleteness, and refusal of epiphanic resolution — produce what the article terms the "unmournable soldier": a figure whose experience the culture cannot adequately grieve. The analysis situates Shaw within post-WWII American literature and argues for renewed critical attention to his short fiction.

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