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Veteran Narratives and the Collective Memory of the Vietnam War (War and Society in North America)
Veteran Narratives and the Collective Memory of the Vietnam War - War and Society in North America Author:John A. Wood ?Wood?s fascinating study of Vietnam veterans? memoirs explores common themes and representations?accurate and inaccurate?of soldiers? wartime experiences and how these narratives helped shape Americans? collective memory of the war. This groundbreaking volume provides a unique perspective on America?s most divisive military conflict since the C... more »ivil War.? ?Kenneth L. Kusmer, author of Down and Out, on the Road: The Homeless in American HistoryIn the decades since the Vietnam War, veteran memoirs have influenced Americans? understanding of the conflict. Yet few historians or literary scholars have scrutinized how the genre has shaped the nation?s collective memory of the war and its aftermath. Instead, veterans? accounts are mined for colorful quotes and then dropped from public discourse; are accepted as factual sources with little attention to how memory, no matter how authentic, can diverge from events; or are not contextualized in terms of the race, gender, or class of the narrators.
Veteran Narratives and the Collective Memory of the Vietnam War is a landmark study of the cultural heritage of the war in Vietnam as presented through the experience of its American participants. Crossing disciplinary borders in ways rarely attempted by historians, John A. Wood unearths truths embedded in the memoirists? treatments of combat, the Vietnamese people, race relations in the United States military, male-female relationships in the war zone, and veterans? postwar troubles. He also examines the publishing industry?s influence on collective memory, discussing, for example, the tendency of publishers and reviewers to privilege memoirs critical of the war. Veteran Narratives is a significant and original addition to the literature on Vietnam veterans and the conflict as a whole.« less