War poetry of the Angolan/Namibian Border War: re-membering poetic bodies through textual limbs

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Authors

Genis, Gerhard

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Routledge

Abstract

This article argues for a conceptualisation of war poetry as a corporeal re-membering that encapsulates trauma as literary theme through the ‘poetic bodies’ construct. The ‘poetic bodies’ concept implies that literary language, the physical and psychological body, and the environment interact to create ontological meaning through poetry. Therefore, the discussion takes place within a ‘poetic bodies’ epistemological framework, as it resonates with a South African Defence Force soldier’s (Dawid) poetry of the Angolan/Namibian Border War (1966–1989) within the larger body of Border War poetry. The article also indicates how Dawid’s biographical memory, as captured in a life story is manifested in his poetic expression of psychological re-membering and ‘sense-making’ of wartime experience. Therefore, it reveals how his poems or ‘poetic bodies’ re-member war through word-traces and symbols of physical and psychological trauma, which was triggered by environmental stressors during the Angolan/Namibian Border War.

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Keywords

Post-traumatic stress, Angolan/Namibian Border War poetry, War literature, Poetic bodies, SDG-04: Quality education

Sustainable Development Goals

SDG-04:Quality Education

Citation

Gerhard Genis & Melanie Moen (2024) War Poetry of the Angolan/ Namibian Border War: Re-membering Poetic Bodies through Textual Limbs, Current Writing: Text and Reception in Southern Africa, 36:1, 24-39, DOI: 10.1080/1013929X.2024.2325766.