The Women’s Land Army (1944): Vita Sackville-West’s Non-Fictional Wartime Writing

Recently, there has been a resurgence of interest in Vita Sackville-West’s life, with the publication of a new biography by Matthew Dennison (Behind the Mask, 2014), about thirty years after Victoria Glendinning’s authoritative one, Vita (1983). Her love life and her skills as a gardener have been e...

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Main Author: Christine REYNIER
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Laboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA) 2020-06-01
Series:E-REA
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/erea/9721
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author Christine REYNIER
author_facet Christine REYNIER
author_sort Christine REYNIER
collection DOAJ
description Recently, there has been a resurgence of interest in Vita Sackville-West’s life, with the publication of a new biography by Matthew Dennison (Behind the Mask, 2014), about thirty years after Victoria Glendinning’s authoritative one, Vita (1983). Her love life and her skills as a gardener have been explored by critics such as Sarah Raven, Suzanne Raitt or Karyn Sproles. However, her fiction and her non-fiction remain underexplored by academic criticism even as her novels The Edwardians (1930), All Passion Spent (1931), her award-winning poem The Land (1926), her travel writing (Twelve Days in Persia, 1927) and her work on her garden, Sissinghurst, remain quite popular.This paper means to focus on a little-known work of non-fiction Vita Sackville-West published towards the end of the Second World War, The Women’s Land Army (1944). It came out two years after Grand Canyon (1942) – a work of speculative fiction staging the victory of the Nazis in the United States after they had won the Second Word War – and three years after Country Notes in Wartime (1941), a collection of essays that were first published in The New Statesman and Nation from August 1939 until 1941. The Women’s Land Army draws our attention to the lives of the women who joined the WLA during the Second World War. The status of this book is discussed here: is it mere propaganda, a historical document, or a piece of modernist writing? Raising such questions about the status of this non-fictional narrative helps to place the author within a modernist literary context.
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spelling doaj-art-cdaf3979fd7d4a4c9861a639d71c22fb2025-01-09T12:55:08ZengLaboratoire d’Etudes et de Recherches sur le Monde Anglophone (LERMA)E-REA1638-17182020-06-0117210.4000/erea.9721The Women’s Land Army (1944): Vita Sackville-West’s Non-Fictional Wartime WritingChristine REYNIERRecently, there has been a resurgence of interest in Vita Sackville-West’s life, with the publication of a new biography by Matthew Dennison (Behind the Mask, 2014), about thirty years after Victoria Glendinning’s authoritative one, Vita (1983). Her love life and her skills as a gardener have been explored by critics such as Sarah Raven, Suzanne Raitt or Karyn Sproles. However, her fiction and her non-fiction remain underexplored by academic criticism even as her novels The Edwardians (1930), All Passion Spent (1931), her award-winning poem The Land (1926), her travel writing (Twelve Days in Persia, 1927) and her work on her garden, Sissinghurst, remain quite popular.This paper means to focus on a little-known work of non-fiction Vita Sackville-West published towards the end of the Second World War, The Women’s Land Army (1944). It came out two years after Grand Canyon (1942) – a work of speculative fiction staging the victory of the Nazis in the United States after they had won the Second Word War – and three years after Country Notes in Wartime (1941), a collection of essays that were first published in The New Statesman and Nation from August 1939 until 1941. The Women’s Land Army draws our attention to the lives of the women who joined the WLA during the Second World War. The status of this book is discussed here: is it mere propaganda, a historical document, or a piece of modernist writing? Raising such questions about the status of this non-fictional narrative helps to place the author within a modernist literary context.https://journals.openedition.org/erea/9721modernismhistorywomeninvisibilityThe Women’s Land Armypropaganda
spellingShingle Christine REYNIER
The Women’s Land Army (1944): Vita Sackville-West’s Non-Fictional Wartime Writing
E-REA
modernism
history
women
invisibility
The Women’s Land Army
propaganda
title The Women’s Land Army (1944): Vita Sackville-West’s Non-Fictional Wartime Writing
title_full The Women’s Land Army (1944): Vita Sackville-West’s Non-Fictional Wartime Writing
title_fullStr The Women’s Land Army (1944): Vita Sackville-West’s Non-Fictional Wartime Writing
title_full_unstemmed The Women’s Land Army (1944): Vita Sackville-West’s Non-Fictional Wartime Writing
title_short The Women’s Land Army (1944): Vita Sackville-West’s Non-Fictional Wartime Writing
title_sort women s land army 1944 vita sackville west s non fictional wartime writing
topic modernism
history
women
invisibility
The Women’s Land Army
propaganda
url https://journals.openedition.org/erea/9721
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