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Aestheticising War Noises as Literary Devices: Ford Madox Ford’s Epistolary and Essayistic Poetics of Sound(scape)s Cover

Aestheticising War Noises as Literary Devices: Ford Madox Ford’s Epistolary and Essayistic Poetics of Sound(scape)s

Open Access
|Nov 2025

Abstract

Ford Madox Ford was in active service through almost the full extent of World War I. Between 1915 and 1929, he published several war narratives and poems in which words like Shrapnel and several war noises and silences are recurrent. The possibility of imminent death stimulated the drive to write and sometimes to dismiss or ignore danger. In 1916 and 1917, the author wrote several essays and letters, including three “notes upon [war] sounds” (Ford, Letters 73) to Joseph Conrad that could and did become useful future material for novels. This article deals with the diverse war and natural soundscapes and acoustic plots used in Ford’s fragmentary epistolary and essayistic texts (“Arms and the Mind”; “War and the Mind”) to convey the violence and traumatic dimensions of war, as well as a new way to perceive and represent life on the Front.

DOI: https://doi.org/10.5334/as.207 | Journal eISSN: 2184-6006
Language: English
Submitted on: Jan 20, 2025
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Accepted on: Sep 15, 2025
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Published on: Nov 19, 2025
Published by: Ubiquity Press
In partnership with: Paradigm Publishing Services
Publication frequency: 2 issues per year

© 2025 Rogério Miguel Puga, published by Ubiquity Press
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License.