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Traumatic Defeat - POWs, MIAs, and National Mythmaking (Hardcover)
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Traumatic Defeat - POWs, MIAs, and National Mythmaking (Hardcover)
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War breeds myths, especially those made up by the vanquished to
explain or soften their loss. Occasionally the myths of the
defeated center on prisoners of war (POWs) and those missing in
action (MIAs) to justify the lost struggle, mute national guilt,
and sometimes even reject the reality of defeat itself. Traumatic
Defeat takes a close, comparative look at two cases of this kind of
mythmaking—in West Germany in the wake of World War II and in the
United States after the Vietnam War. The book examines a specific
case of mythmaking that revolves around the ambiguity of missing
men and the trauma resulting from their unresolved fates. The
“secret camp myth,” so called for the covert facilities where
the missing supposedly survive, shared certain features in postwar
Germany and America. Both nations suffered extreme trauma and
struggled to find redemptive elements in their wartime experiences;
both focused on POWs and MIAs to minimize their guilt and recast
themselves as victims of wars they had started. Author Patrick
Gallagher examines the similarities between West Germany’s myth
aimed at men lost in the Soviet Union and America’s myth directed
at those missing in Southeast Asia. The differences, however, are
instructive, particularly the longevity of the American myth
involving a few thousand soldiers compared with the relative short
life of the more plausible German version involving millions. In
search of the nature and meaning of these myths, Gallagher takes us
into the wars themselves, the circumstances in which soldiers went
missing, and the manner in which each nation framed its losses
according to its own political, ideological, and historical needs.
Traumatic Defeat, the first in-depth comparative study of this
phenomenon, reveals how myths conjured in the trauma of military
defeat can distort and dominate national conversations on the
history of warfare, aftermath, and loss.
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