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At the heart of Scriptures for a Generation are dozens of detailed
entries discussing individual writers and the particular importance
of their texts - bona fide '60s classics ranging from The
Autobiography of Malcolm X and Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five
to Carlos Casteneda's The Teachings of Don Juan and the Boston
Women's Health Book Collective's Our Bodies, Ourselves. Represented
as well are such works of revered elders as Hermann Hesse's
Steppenwolf and Henry David Thoreau's Walden. Beidler's coverage
also extends to works of the early '70s that are clearly textual
and spiritual extensions of the '60s: the Portola Institute's Last
Whole Earth Catalog, Annie Dillard's Pilgrim at Tinker Creek,
Robert Pirsig's Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance, and
others. An overview of reading and writing as both a product and
prime mover of '60s culture precedes the main section. In his
conclusion Beidler highlights the most notable efforts to document
and interpret the era.
Philip D. Beidler, who served as an armored cavalry platoon leader
in Vietnam, sees less and less of the hard-won perspective of the
common soldier in what America has made of that war. Each passing
year, he says, dulls our sense of immediacy about Vietnam's costs,
opening wider the temptation to make it something more necessary,
neatly contained, and justifiable than it should ever become. Here
Beidler draws on deeply personal memories to reflect on the war's
lingering aftereffects and the shallow, evasive ways we deal with
them. Beidler brings back the war he knew in chapters on its
vocabulary, music, literature, and film. His catalog of soldier
slang reveals how finely a tour of Vietnam could hone one's sense
of absurdity. His survey of the war's pop hits looks for meaning in
the soundtrack many veterans still hear in their heads. Beidler
also explains how ""Viet Pulp"" literature about snipers, tunnel
rats, and other hard-core types has pushed aside masterpieces like
Duong Thu Huong's Novel without a Name. Likewise we learn why the
movie The Deer Hunter doesn't ""get it"" about Vietnam but why
Platoon and We Were Soldiers sometimes nearly do. As Beidler takes
measure of his own wartime politics and morals, he ponders the
divergent careers of such figures as William Calley, the army
lieutenant whose name is synonymous with the civilian massacre at
My Lai, and an old friend, poet John Balaban, a conscientious
objector who performed alternative duty in Vietnam as a
schoolteacher and hospital worker. Beidler also looks at Vietnam
alongside other conflicts--including the war on international
terrorism. He once hoped, he says, that Vietnam had fractured our
sense of providential destiny and geopolitical invincibility but
now realizes, with dismay, that those myths are still with us.
""Americans have always wanted their apocalypses,"" writes Beidler,
""and they have always wanted them now.
A probing and holistic meditation on the key question: Why do we
continue to make art, and thus beauty, out of war? Beautiful War:
Studies in a Dreadful Fascination is a wide-ranging exploration of
armed conflict as depicted in art that illustrates the constant
presence of war in our everyday lives. Philip D. Beidler
investigates the unending assimilation and pervasive presence of
the idea of war in popular culture, the impulses behind the making
of art out of war, and the unending and debatably aimless
trajectories of war itself. Beidler's critical scope spans from
Shakespeare's plays, through the Victorian battle paintings of Lady
Butler, into the post-World War I writings of F. Scott Fitzgerald
and Virginia Woolf, and up to twenty-first-century films such as
The Hurt Locker and Extremely Loud and Incredibly Close. As these
works of art have become ubiquitous in contemporary culture, the
many faces of war clearly spill over into our art and media, and
Beidler argues that these portrayals in turn shift the perception
of war from a savage truth to a concept. Beautiful War argues that
the representation of war in the arts has always been, and
continues to be, an incredibly powerful force. Incorporating
painting, music, photography, literature, and film, Beidler traces
a disturbing but fundamental truth: that war has always provided an
aesthetic inspiration while serving ends as various and complex as
ideological or geopolitical history, public memory, and mass
entertainment. Beautiful War is a bold and vivid account of the
role of war and military conflict as a subject of art that offers
much of value to literary and cultural critics, historians,
veterans, students of art history and communication studies, and
those interested in expanding their understanding of art and
media's influence on contemporary values and memories of the past.
Philip D. Beidler, who served as an armored cavalry platoon leader
in Vietnam, sees lees and less of the hard-won perspective of the
common soldier in what America has made of that war. Each passing
year, he says, dulls out sense of immediacy about Vietnam's costs,
opening wider the temptation to make it something more necessary,
neatly contained, and justifiable than it should ever become. Here
Beidler draws on deeply personal memories to reflect on the war's
lingering aftereffects and the shallow, evasive ways we deal with
them. Beidler brings back the war he knew in chapters on its
vocabulary, music, literature, and film. His catalog of soldier
slang reveals how finely a tour of Vietnam could hone one's sense
of absurdity. His survey of the war's pop hits looks for meaning in
the soundtrack many veterans still hear in their heads. Beidler
also explains how "Viet Pulp" literature about snipers, tunnel
rats, and other hard-core types has pushed aside masterpieces like
Duong Thu Huong's "Novel without a Name. Likewise we learn why the
movie "The Deer Hunter doesn't "get it" about Vietnam but why
"Platoon or "We Were Soldiers sometimes nearly do. As Beidler takes
measure of his own wartime politics and morals, he ponders the
divergent careers of such figures as William Calley, the army
lieutenant whose name is synonymous with the civilian massacre at
My Lai; and an old friend, poet John Balaban, a conscientious
objector who performed alternative duty in Vietnam as a
schoolteacher and hospital worker. Beidler also looks at Vietnam
alongside other conflicts--including the war on international
terrorism. He once hoped, he says, that Vietnam had fractured our
sense of providential destinyand geopolitical invincibility but now
realizes, with dismay, that those myths are still with us.
"Americans have always wanted their apocalypses," writes Beidler,
"and they have always wanted them now."
In his exploration of the ways in which writers have tried to make
sense of the Vietnam experience, Philip D. Beidler brings to light
a whole literature that in its moments of fullest achievement quite
literally ""creates"" a Vietnam more real than reality. Beidler
turns his attention to a wide variety of literary texts: novels,
plays, poems, memoirs, oral histories, documentaries, and
reportage. Perceptive and evocative, ""American Literature and the
Experience of Vietnam"" is a comprehensive discussion of the
literature of the war and a study of literary consciousness
relative to the larger process of cultural myth-making.
More than fifty writers, from Timothy Leary and Malcolm X to Helen
Gurley Brown and Rachel Carson, are individually profiled in this
lively survey of the literature of the 1960s. A look at the books
behind the decade's youth movements, Scriptures for a Generation
recalls the era as one of unprecedented literacy and belief in the
power of books to change society. In showing that the generation
that came of age in the '60s marked both the height and the end of
"the last great reading culture," Philip D. Beidler also implies
much about the state of literacy in our country today. Featured are
bona fide 1960s classics ranging from Kahlil Gibran's The Prophet
and Kurt Vonnegut's Slaughterhouse Five to Carlos Casteneda's The
Teachings of Don Juan and the Boston Women's Health Book
Collective's Our Bodies, Ourselves. Represented as well are such
works of revered elders as Hermann Hesse's Steppenwolf and Henry
David Thoreau's Walden. Beidler's coverage also extends to works of
the early 1970s that are textual and spiritual extensions of the
1960s: the Portola Institute's Last Whole Earth Catalog, Annie
Dillard's Pilgrim at Tinker Creek, Robert Pirsig's Zen and the Art
of Motorcycle Maintenance, and others.
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