Maybe you dream of moules frites and Belgian beer every night, or maybe you wake up wishing you were anywhere else, but Belgium is where the long and winding road has brought you. The "More From Brussels" podcast aims to bring a fresh perspective on this city, an adopted home away from home for so many expats.
Sunday, November 11, 2012
First World War poetry with Dr Kate Macdonald
In most countries in Western Europe, the 11th November is marked with a public holiday to remember Armistice Day - the end of first world war hostilities on the western front. The poetry from that era has endured, and the words of great figures in English literature still speak to the experience of war. Rupert Brooke, Wilfred Owen, Siegfried Sassoon - all left a rich legacy, despite having died so young. This poetry is discussed by Dr Kate Macdonald, a British academic who teaches in a Flemish university - the University of Gent, in Belgium. Most of her students grew up on or near the very ground where so many lost their lives in the First World War. More From Brussels spoke with her about the significance of this poetry to students of English literature.
Kate Macdonald also podcasts at www.reallylikethisbook.com: podcasting about the books we shouldn't forget.