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Unlike any society’s dream to live in peace, war does it all. The Yellow Birds by Kevin Powers critically examines the protagonist’s life through the lens of psychoanalysis, challenging the conventional depiction of the war hero as a Byronic or anti-hero characterised by guilt, moral ambiguity and emotional estrangement. The spirited war hero and a dutiful soldier-protagonist, John Bartle, goes through emotional dilemma, despondency, remorseful dreams, guilt and faded memory, where he is unable to exist in the real world other than a war zone with killings and casualties. The study further examines the tension between war and home, highlighting images of nature, water and childhood memories that serve as a fleeting psychological refuge from violence. The recurring binary oppositions of desert and water, life and death, warmth and coldness and green landscapes at the backdrop of fading brown desert symbolize Bartle’s fragmented search for emotional stability amid traumatic disorder. The Trauma theory reveals that trauma constantly emerges from the protagonist's fear of moral betrayal, which gets heightened with Bartle's persistent guilt over the failure to uphold a promise made to a fellow soldier's mother, evolving into self-condemnation and psychological unrest.
The existing study interprets John Bartle as a traumatised anti-hero within the Iraq war narrative. However, this paper argues that Powers reconstructs Bartle as a distinct “Byronic soldier,” a contemporary reimagining of the Byronic hero shaped not only by emotional suffering but also by alienation, repression and existential collapse. His inability to reintegrate himself into civilian life displays the transformation of the classical war hero into a psychologically deformed modern figure, followed by fractured consciousness, recurring guilt and emotional withdrawal. This viewpoint clarifies the psychological doubt of justice within the hierarchical military structures after confronting the brutal realities of war, like disfigured bodies, civilian casualties and normalised violence. The paper places Bartle within the literary tradition of the Byronic hero in The Yellow Birds within the context of the Iraq War. It deconstructs the myth of the heroic soldier by portraying war as a site of psychological disruption followed by emotional detachment, self-conscious alienation, moral ambiguity and failed redemption, leading a hero to a Byronic ending and the making of a Byronic Soldier.
Ms. Gunjan Palariya. “The Making of the Byronic Soldier in Kevin Powers’ Iraq War Narrative The Yellow Birds.” The Criterion: An International Journal in English, vol. 17, no. 3, June 2026, pp. 177-190. DOI, https://doi.org/10.66376/criterion.v17.n3.13.



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