Paper Status Tracking
Contact us
[email protected]
Click here to send a message to me 3275638434
Paper Publishing WeChat

Article
Affiliation(s)

Undergraduate School, National University of Defense Technology, Changsha 410072, China

ABSTRACT

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.

KEYWORDS

Helen Benedict, The Lonely Soldier, female soldiers, victims of violence, meaning of writing

Cite this paper

Journal of Literature and Art Studies, August 2024, Vol. 14, No. 8, 689-692

References

Benedict, H. (2009). The lonely soldier: The private war of women serving in Iraq. Boston: Beacon Press.

Liu, H. M., & Yang, K. (2022). On the charges of the representation of trauma in British war narratives. Academic Research, (07), 158-165+178.

Liu, J. N. (2022). Female narrative perspective in documentary literature: Alexevich’s works on “emotional trauma writing”. Journal of Chongqing Jiaotong University (Social Science Edition), (03), 82-89.

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.

Recent Publications. (2010). The Middle East Journal, 64(3), 502-507.

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.

About | Terms & Conditions | Issue | Privacy | Contact us
Copyright © 2001 - David Publishing Company All rights reserved, www.davidpublisher.com
3 Germay Dr., Unit 4 #4651, Wilmington DE 19804; Tel: 001-302-3943358 Email: [email protected]