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Analysis Of The Book ' By Helen Humphreys And Days Of Significance By Roy Williams

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Coventry by Helen Humphreys and Days of Significance by Roy Williams have a number of sexual interactions. The only problem with all but one of these sexual interactions is that the importance of sexual acts is missing. When the gravity of the war has sunk into Harriet in World War Two her sexual interaction with Jeremy is not special. In Days of Significance the war in Iraq has many influences on sexual interaction, non of which are positive. Also, Overlord and Execution display the lack of importance and some aspects of objectifying woman. I argue using these sources that in times of war sex loses its importance and turns into a casual interaction as well as being prevented all the while objectifying females. To begin, one primary text that illustrates the effect war has on sex is Coventry by Humphreys. To start off, in the beginning of the text Harriet has sex with her husband. The sexual interaction between the married couple appeared to be so special the Harriet gave her husband a memento of their time together, “She had slipped a pair of her panties in this morning … those panties he had struggled so hard to take off her last night” (Humphreys 13). When Harriet and Owen have sex in the beginning of the text, the two still believed that the war would only last until Christmas. The gravity of the war has not yet sunk into the newly weds. Without the full gravity of the war pressing down on Harriet and Owen, the two were able to have a special sexual interaction.

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