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This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License
LI De-kun, MA Xiao-lei, LI Xin-yue
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DOI:10.17265/2159-5836/2024.08.006
Undergraduate School, National University of Defense Technology, Changsha 410072, China
Benedict is an award-winning novelist and non-fiction writer specializing in social injustice. Her non-fiction book The Lonely Soldier reflects the impact of war on violence against women. Female soldiers are always the victims of violence, before, during, and after serving in the Iraq War. This thesis aims to explore their trauma and illuminate the book’s meaning.
Helen Benedict, The Lonely Soldier, female soldiers, victims of violence, meaning of writing
Journal of Literature and Art Studies, August 2024, Vol. 14, No. 8, 689-692
Benedict, H. (2009). The lonely soldier: The private war of women serving in Iraq. Boston: Beacon Press.
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Liu, T. (2022). Violence and women’s empowerment: female soldier narratives in the twenty-first-century American war writings. Foreign Languages and Cultures, 6(01), 31-40.
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Smith, W. (2017). Helen Benedict, scribe of women and war. Publishers Weekly, 264(33), 45.
Wright, G. (2018). “I’m a soldier, not a gender”: Iraq war literature and the double bind of being a woman in combat. Women’s Studies, 47(6), 657-672.