Understanding Exposure by Wilfred Owen
Ever wondered what war poetry was really like before social media showed us the truth? Owen was absolutely revolutionary for his time because he ditched the typical patriotic, heroic approach to writing about war. Instead of celebrating brave soldiers and glorious battles, he showed the British public what was actually happening to their young men.
Owen joined the army in 1915 and experienced trench warfare firsthand. He originally wanted to work for the church but became disillusioned with their hypocrisy - sound familiar to how he felt about the government? His main message was that war was completely pointless and that soldiers were being treated as disposable by those in power.
The poem's title "Exposure" works on multiple levels - it's about soldiers being exposed to harsh weather and enemy attacks, but it's also Owen exposing government propaganda. He wanted to reveal how young lads were being lied to and manipulated into signing up.
Key Point: Owen's revolutionary approach was showing war as futile and horrific, not glorious - this was shocking to readers at the time.
The poem focuses on dehumanisation of soldiers and the horrific conditions they endured. Everyone's questioning why they're even fighting and whether any of it will be worthwhile. Owen uses powerful techniques like personification ("merciless iced east winds that knive us") to show how even nature seems to be attacking the soldiers. The irony is devastating - they're not being killed by enemy weapons, but by the weather itself.