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This collection of seven essays, like the carefully linked
collection of vignettes within Tim O'Brien's most popular book The
Things They Carried, contains multiple critical and biographical
angles with recurring threads of life events, themes, characters,
creative techniques, and references to all of O'Brien's books.
Grounded in through research, Herzog's work illustrates how O'Brien
merges his life experiences with his creative production; he rarely
misses an opportunity to introduce these critical life events into
his writing.
This collection of seven essays, like the carefully linked
collection of vignettes within Tim O'Brien's most popular book The
Things They Carried, contains multiple critical and biographical
angles with recurring threads of life events, themes, characters,
creative techniques, and references to all of O'Brien's books.
Grounded in through research, Herzog's work illustrates how O'Brien
merges his life experiences with his creative production; he rarely
misses an opportunity to introduce these critical life events into
his writing.
The Gulf War and its aftermath have testified once again to the
significance placed on the meanings and images of Vietnam by US
media and culture. Almost two decades after the end of hostilities,
the Vietnam War remains a dominant moral, political and military
touchstone in American cultural consciousness. Vietnam War Stories
provides a comprehensive critical framework for understanding the
Vietnam experience, Vietnam narratives and modern war literature.
The narratives examined - personal accounts as well as novels -
portray a soldier's and a country's journey from pre-war innocence,
through battlefield experience and consideration, to a difficult
post-war adjustment. Tobey Herzog places these narratives within
the context of important cultural and literary themes, including
inherent ironies of war, the "John Wayne syndrome" of pre-war
innocence, and the "heavy Heart-of-Darkness trip" of the conflict
itself.
The Gulf War and its aftermath has testified once again to the
significance placed on the meanings and images of Vietnam, by the
US media and culture. Almost two decades after the end of
hostilities, the Vietnam war remains a dominant moral, political
and military touchstone in American cultural consciousness.
"Vietnam War Stories" provides an introduction to ten key
narratives, including personal accounts as well as novels. The work
of, amongst others, Philip Caputo, Michael Herr, Tim O'Brien and
Bobbi Ann Mason is located in the context of contemporary cinema
and TV and a tradition of modern war literature from Crane and
Hemingway to Mailer and Jones. By tracing cultural and literary
themes generated by the conflict, Tobey Herzog charts the
transformations undergone by US soldiers and by the American nation
in their experience of modern war. He examines the "John Wayne
syndrome" of pre-war innocence through the "Heavy Heart of Darkness
trip" of the conflict itself and beyond to the "aftermath novels"
of the post-war adjustment period.
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