‘LOST GENERATION’ IN AMERICAN LITERATURE
Ключевые слова:
Rosberg, Brook, Edward Thomas, Wilfred Owen, and Masley's artists.Аннотация
The term refers to the generation of young men who came of age during the First World War. Authors William Strauss and Neil Howe define the Lost Generation as those born between 1883 and 1900. and the Roaring Twenties. In Europe, they are often called the "generation of 1914", the year of the beginning of the First World War. In France, they were sometimes called feet, "(gun) fire." In the UK, this term was first used for the dead and often implicitly reported to high victims, and they felt proportional to the country and plundered the country's future elite. Many people felt that "the flower of young people and the best manhood of people" for example, the poets of Isaac Rosberg, Brook, Edward Thomas, Wilfred Owen, and Masley's artists.
Библиографические ссылки
Hynes, Samuel (1990). A War Imagined: The First World War and English Culture. London: The Bodley Head. p. 386. ISBN 0-370-30451-9.
^ Madsen, Alex (2015). Sonia Delaunay: Artist of the Lost Generation. Open Road Distribution. ISBN 9781504008518.
^ Fitch, Noel Riley (1983). Sylvia Beach and the Lost Generation: A History of Literary Paris in the Twenties and Thirties. WW Norton. ISBN 9780393302318.
Monk, Craig (2010). Writing the Lost Generation: Expatriate Autobiography and American Modernism. University of Iowa Press. ISBN 9781587297434.
Richard Aldington, Ernest (1996). The Sun Also Rises. New York: Scribner. ISBN 0684830515. OCLC 34476446.
Winter, J. M. (November 1977). "Britain's 'Lost Generation' of the First World War" (PDF). Population Studies. 31 (3): 449–466. doi:10.2307/2173368. JSTOR 2173368. PMID 11630506. Archived (PDF) from the original on 13 July 2015. Retrieved 11 July 2015. 7. Rosa Luxemburg et al., "A Spartacan Manifesto Archived 5 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine, The Nation, 8 March 1919, pp. 373–374