Episode notes
Imagine an artistic voice so potent it permanently rearchitected how humanity perceives the concept of conflict, only to be silenced by a bullet just seven days before the guns stopped firing. In this episode of pplpod, we conduct a structural archaeology of Wilfred Owen, deconstructing his journey from a Keats-obsessed romantic to the definitive voice of the Great War. We unpack the "Craiglockhart Catalyst," analyzing how a diagnosis of Shell Shock and the "work cure" of Dr. Arthur Brock facilitated a faithful friendship with Siegfried Sassoon. We deconstruct Owen’s technical brilliance, specifically his pioneering use of Pararhyme—a dissonant, incomplete rhyming structure designed to musically reflect the broken reality of the front lines. By examining his hidd ...