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International Journal of Social Science and Education Research
Peer Reviewed Journal

Vol. 7, Issue 1, Part E (2025)

An extension of the edition of methodology and stylistics in the works of contemporary writers: The effect of World War II on English literature

Author(s):

Shaima Hassan Matroud

Abstract:

This study examines how World War II changed English literature's style and content material. Modern literature approach and style are tested, focusing on how they have changed in response to the warfare's social and mental outcomes. This study examines how World War II shaped English literature, how writers depicted wartime studies and mental trauma, and the way these stories prompted modernism and postmodernism. The research examines how the struggle's social and psychological upheavals affected literary production, focusing on authors' e-book patterns. The take a look at examines a choice of modern conflict-affected literature. The studies begin with literary techniques and stylistics. It emphasizes the importance of technique in literary studies since it enables understanding of how warfare influences literature and society. Technique is also careworn in explaining how literature influences social and political change. The studies examine World War II's effect on English society and the way it modified literature, forcing authors to use new methods to express mental trauma and existential dread. Postwar modernism and postmodernism formed English literature's fundamental literary traits. The take a look at compares George Orwell, Katherine Mansfield, and Virginia Woolf's publish-warfare literature, highlighting their changes. The studies examine their creative literary strategies, such as fragmented narratives and psychological symbolism. Despite the challenges of a male-ruled literary world, the study examines ladies's writing and its role in publish-struggle literature. It examines how struggle affects literary gender identities. The studies examines how war stimulated the novel, poetry, and drama, in addition to how historical context and psychological factors shaped those paperwork. The look at highlights World War II's lasting impact on English literature and cutting-edge writing. It also indicates that literary studies will continue to study how warfare affects literary production and how literature might cope with modern-day social and psychological demanding situations.

Pages: 391-398  |  65 Views  26 Downloads


International Journal of Social Science and Education Research
How to cite this article:
Shaima Hassan Matroud. An extension of the edition of methodology and stylistics in the works of contemporary writers: The effect of World War II on English literature. Int. J. Social Sci. Educ. Res. 2025;7(1):391-398. DOI: 10.33545/26649845.2025.v7.i1e.228
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