American War Stories: Veteran-Writers and the Politics of Memoir
Trust in media and political institutions is at an all-time low in America, yet veterans enjoy an unmatched level of credibility and moral authority. Their war stories have become crucial testimony about the nation's leadership, foreign policies, and wars. Veterans' memoirs are not simply self-revelatory personal chronicles but contributions to political culture—to the stories circulated and incorporated into national myths and memories.

American War Stories centers on an extensive selection of memoirs written by veterans of the Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan conflicts—including Brian Turner's My Life as a Foreign Country, Marcus Luttrell's Lone Survivor, and Camilo Mejia's Road from ar Ramadi—to explore the complex relationship between memory and politics in the context of postmodern war. Placing veterans' stories in conversation with broader cultural and political discourses, Myra Mendible analyzes the volatile mix of agendas, identities, and issues informing veteran-writers' narrative choices to argue that their work plays an important, though underexamined, political function in how Americans remember and judge their wars.
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American War Stories: Veteran-Writers and the Politics of Memoir
Trust in media and political institutions is at an all-time low in America, yet veterans enjoy an unmatched level of credibility and moral authority. Their war stories have become crucial testimony about the nation's leadership, foreign policies, and wars. Veterans' memoirs are not simply self-revelatory personal chronicles but contributions to political culture—to the stories circulated and incorporated into national myths and memories.

American War Stories centers on an extensive selection of memoirs written by veterans of the Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan conflicts—including Brian Turner's My Life as a Foreign Country, Marcus Luttrell's Lone Survivor, and Camilo Mejia's Road from ar Ramadi—to explore the complex relationship between memory and politics in the context of postmodern war. Placing veterans' stories in conversation with broader cultural and political discourses, Myra Mendible analyzes the volatile mix of agendas, identities, and issues informing veteran-writers' narrative choices to argue that their work plays an important, though underexamined, political function in how Americans remember and judge their wars.
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American War Stories: Veteran-Writers and the Politics of Memoir

American War Stories: Veteran-Writers and the Politics of Memoir

by Myra Mendible
American War Stories: Veteran-Writers and the Politics of Memoir

American War Stories: Veteran-Writers and the Politics of Memoir

by Myra Mendible

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Overview

Trust in media and political institutions is at an all-time low in America, yet veterans enjoy an unmatched level of credibility and moral authority. Their war stories have become crucial testimony about the nation's leadership, foreign policies, and wars. Veterans' memoirs are not simply self-revelatory personal chronicles but contributions to political culture—to the stories circulated and incorporated into national myths and memories.

American War Stories centers on an extensive selection of memoirs written by veterans of the Vietnam, Iraq, and Afghanistan conflicts—including Brian Turner's My Life as a Foreign Country, Marcus Luttrell's Lone Survivor, and Camilo Mejia's Road from ar Ramadi—to explore the complex relationship between memory and politics in the context of postmodern war. Placing veterans' stories in conversation with broader cultural and political discourses, Myra Mendible analyzes the volatile mix of agendas, identities, and issues informing veteran-writers' narrative choices to argue that their work plays an important, though underexamined, political function in how Americans remember and judge their wars.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781625346315
Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
Publication date: 12/17/2021
Series: Veterans
Pages: 216
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.70(d)

About the Author

MYRA MENDIBLE is professor of English at Florida Gulf Coast University. She is author of American Shame: Stigma and the Body Politic.

Table of Contents

Preface
Acknowledgments
Author’s Note 

Introduction: Plausible Deniability: Real Soldiers, True Fictions 
1. Protestors, Patriots, and Culture Warriors: American Politics and the Citizen-Soldier
2. The Fate Worse than Death: Saving Face and the Affective Economy of War
3. Trusting the Messenger: Veterans’ Memoirs and the Politics of Credibility
4. "Soldiers of Conviction": Duty, Dissent, and the Immigrant Soldier
5. Silence Amid the Din of War: The Politics and Poetics of Audibility in Brian Turner’s My Life as a Foreign Country
6. Beginnings: Stories That Need Telling

Notes
Works Cited
Index

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