
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Completed in 1916, Le Feu was the first explicit account of conditions at the front. French soldier Henri Barbusse's novel proved a revelation to a French public sold a sentimental line by the press of the time. Yet Le Feu, with its deep insights into the emotions of men at war, was not seen as damaging to home-front morale. Here was a new kind of writing in which rural dialects and working-class accents conveyed heroism, and could be literary, even transcendent. Dr Heather Jones reflects on Barbusse's novel.
By BBC Radio4.2
176176 ratings
Completed in 1916, Le Feu was the first explicit account of conditions at the front. French soldier Henri Barbusse's novel proved a revelation to a French public sold a sentimental line by the press of the time. Yet Le Feu, with its deep insights into the emotions of men at war, was not seen as damaging to home-front morale. Here was a new kind of writing in which rural dialects and working-class accents conveyed heroism, and could be literary, even transcendent. Dr Heather Jones reflects on Barbusse's novel.

7,722 Listeners

1,038 Listeners

5,545 Listeners

1,815 Listeners

3,192 Listeners

1,235 Listeners

1,827 Listeners

1,060 Listeners

2,001 Listeners

4,791 Listeners

4,178 Listeners

3,166 Listeners

758 Listeners

188 Listeners

5,126 Listeners

538 Listeners

14,665 Listeners

1,837 Listeners

2,822 Listeners

2,505 Listeners

329 Listeners

1,078 Listeners

115 Listeners

230 Listeners

963 Listeners