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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
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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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