Caroline Zilboorg
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‘What part have I now that you have come together?’
Richard Aldington on war, gender and textual representation
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The English poet Richard Aldington and his wife, the American poet Hilda Doolittle (H. D.), became modernist writers who in different ways explored the boundaries of both identity and textual representation. The issue of textual representation is a central concern for both writers. But while feminist scholars over the last twenty years have stressed H. D.'s attention to gender in her work, Aldington's attitudes towards both textuality and sexuality are misrepresented as conventional and fixed. From its very first page, H. D.'s own war novel, Bid Me to Live, addresses the issue of form, the problem of genre, and the difficulties of identity and textual expression that are, in fact, the novel's central subject. The conflict on which H. D. focuses is at once the Great War and the war between the sexes, while the problem of female utterance stems from the war which defines her through marginalisation and loss.

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