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Champlain (Hardcover)
Kimberly J. Lamay, Celine Racine Paquette
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R781
R653
Discovery Miles 6 530
Save R128 (16%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Poised to become a significant player in the new world order, the
United States truly came of age during and after World War I. Yet
many Americans think of the Great War simply as a precursor to
World War II. Americans, including veterans, hastened to put
experiences and memories of the war years behind them, reflecting a
general apathy about the war that had developed during the 1920s
and 1930s and never abated. In Remembering World War I in America
Kimberly J. Lamay Licursi explores the American public's collective
memory and common perception of World War I by analyzing the extent
to which it was expressed through the production of cultural
artifacts related to the war. Through the analysis of four vectors
of memory-war histories, memoirs, fiction, and film-Lamay Licursi
shows that no consistent image or message about the war ever arose
that resonated with a significant segment of the American
population. Not many war histories materialized, war memoirs did
not capture the public's attention, and war novels and films
presented a fictional war that either bore little resemblance to
the doughboys' experience or offered discordant views about what
the war meant. In the end Americans emerged from the interwar years
with limited pockets of public memory about the war that never
found compromise in a dominant myth.
Poised to become a significant player in the new world order, the
United States truly came of age during and after World War I. Yet
many Americans think of the Great War simply as a precursor to
World War II. Americans, including veterans, hastened to put
experiences and memories of the war years behind them, reflecting a
general apathy about the war that had developed during the 1920s
and 1930s and never abated. In Remembering World War I in America
Kimberly J. Lamay Licursi explores the American public's collective
memory and common perception of World War I by analyzing the extent
to which it was expressed through the production of cultural
artifacts related to the war. Through the analysis of four vectors
of memory-war histories, memoirs, fiction, and film-Lamay Licursi
shows that no consistent image or message about the war ever arose
that resonated with a significant segment of the American
population. Not many war histories materialized, war memoirs did
not capture the public's attention, and war novels and films
presented a fictional war that either bore little resemblance to
the doughboys' experience or offered discordant views about what
the war meant. In the end Americans emerged from the interwar years
with limited pockets of public memory about the war that never
found compromise in a dominant myth.
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