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Vera Brittain's Anthem For A Doomed Youth

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Anthem for a Doomed Youth: Vera Brittain’s, Testament of Youth, is a harrowing autobiographical account of the years 1900-1925. Combining personal reflections, letters, and poems, Brittain beautifully constructs a realistic, and searing portrayal of her life and the live of the lost generation. Utterly honest and revealing, Britain’s memoir recollects her life, from provincial youth, to a V.A.D nurse grappling with the ghosts of the war. Told through the lens of Britain as she both directly experiences, and re-experiences the war, the memoir is a torrent of emotions, as she struggles with the war, and the decimation it caused. With the loss of everyone she has ever loved, her brother, her fiancé, and her friends, Testament of Youth, not only serves as an examination of World War One and the changing landscape of Great Britain, but also as a heart-breaking elegy to the lives lost during the Great War. In the first part of the memoir, Brittain reflects on her early years of life. Born into a prosperous upper-middle class family, Vera and her brother, Edward were raised to the extreme standards of provincial Edwardian society. Everything in their lives were strictly controlled by their parents, such as education. …show more content…

After having been living in the Front for several weeks, Roland writes of his foolishness before. “... I used to talk of the beauty of war but it is only war in the abstract that is beautiful. Modern warfare is merely a trade, and it is only a matter of taste whether one is a solider or a greengrocer, as far as I can see” (Brittain, 172). Previously, Roland, like many soldiers, believed the war was a great and noble sacrifice, however, after experiencing the horror of modern warfare, Roland sees his mistake. Roland is no longer youthfully naive in his innocence on the valor of war, but rather a hardened soldier able to glimpse the true death and destruction of modern

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