Abstract :
[en] Born in Thornaby-on-Tees in Yorkshire in 1943, Pat Barker began writing in her mid-twenties and, with encouragement from Angela Carter, published her first novel, Union Street, in 1982. She has since written fifteen more novels and occasional short stories, gaining international acclaim with her World War I trilogy: Regeneration (1991), The Eye in the Door (1993), and The Ghost Road (1995), the latter winning the Booker Prize. Blending facts and fiction, Barker’s novels reimagine the past through characters who experience violence and trauma. Set in different places and locales across several centuries, they revisit either everyday life in (the north of) England, world-historical events such as World War I (WWI) and World War II (WWII), or the legendary past of Greek mythology. Her early novels Union Street (1982), Blow Your House Down (1984), and The Century’s Daughter (1986; republished as Liza’s England in 1996) explore the impact of rape, abuse, and poverty on working-class women in the north of England in the mid-twentieth century, whereas The Man Who Wasn’t There (1989) focuses on adolescent male vulnerability in postwar England. Much of Barker’s fiction, however, centers on the traumatizing consequences of war. The Regeneration trilogy, Life Class (2007), and Toby’s Room (2012) examine WWI, while Noonday (2015), sharing the same protagonists as the former two novels, shifts to WWII. These novels reject notions of heroic masculinity and cultural myths of national “greatness” as they engage with the devastating physical and psychological consequences of trench warfare during WWI and the London “Blitz” during WWII. Another World (1998), which deals with a WWI veteran’s trauma and domestic violence both suffered and perpetrated by children, is linked to Barker’s WWI fiction as well as to Border Crossing (2001), which addresses cultural anxieties surrounding child murderers, referencing the James Bulger case. Double Vision (2003), set in 21st-century northern England, explores the lingering effects of violence through a retired war correspondent haunted by the atrocities he witnessed in Sarajevo during the Bosnian War, the genocide in Rwanda, and the 9/11 terror attacks in New York. Barker’s third trilogy, The Silence of the Girls (2018), The Women of Troy (2021) and The Voyage Home (2024), is set in the Trojan War and its aftermath. Offering a feminist rewriting of the legendary siege of Troy and the Greeks’ journey home, the trilogy reimagines Greek mythology, thus revising canonical texts of European literature. Barker’s short story “Medusa” (published in the New Yorker on 8 April 2019) also offers a feminist retelling of Greek mythology, focusing on rape and revenge.