Article

Sacred Belonging: Writing, Religion and Community in H.D.’s World War II novels

Details

Citation

Anderson E (2012) Sacred Belonging: Writing, Religion and Community in H.D.’s World War II novels. Women: A Cultural Review, 23 (3), pp. 271-286. https://doi.org/10.1080/09574042.2012.708223

Abstract
This paper considers two works from H.D.'s WWII writing, The Gift and The Sword Went Out to Sea. In these texts, H.D. situates herself in the context of diverse intimate communities; her spiritualist circle, her partnership with Bryher, her family and previous generations of Moravians. These communities ground her personal vision of writing as a spiritual exercise that will bring healing to both the individual psyche and the wider society ravaged by war. The significance of community is such that when she becomes isolated, desolation and breakdown follow. The restoration of communication and community through vision and writing leads to healing and a particular understanding of religious modernism as a unity of spiritual and material, transcendent and ordinary.

Keywords
H.D.; religion; spiritualism; writing; modernism

Journal
Women: A Cultural Review: Volume 23, Issue 3

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2012
Publication date online30/08/2012
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/17576
PublisherTaylor and Francis
ISSN0957-4042
eISSN1470-1367

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