3 - The Vietnam Veterans Memorial
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2012
Summary
At the very least, my brother and all the others like him deserve their self-respect, a job, and the right to live out the rest of their lives with the nightmares that war brings in some kind of secure peace.
I can't tell Donnie about this letter because what if that veteran is right! What if no one cares?
(Sister of Vietnam veteran Donnie)Coming back to the world was a bitch! Years of foul accusations, stereotyping, lack of respect and not being accepted back into the mainstream society. However, I dealt with it by using something I had learned in Viet fucking Nam. I just turned on the ol ‘fuck it’ attitude.
(Vietnam veteran Rick Rogers, Wichita, Kansas)Fought between 1956 and 1975 American involvement in the Vietnam War saw over two million US citizens serve and some 58,000 die or be declared missing in action. Michal Belknap in his study of the war cites that during the period August 1965 to October 1967 those who felt it was not a mistake to send troops to Vietnam fell from 61 percent to 44 percent, not to mention that by 1967 a total of seven people had set themselves alight in protest, and the antiwar movement had expanded to become a serious force within American social and political life, including not just students and professors but also members of the clergy and business executives.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Deleuze and Memorial CultureDesire Singular Memory and the Politics of Trauma, pp. 54 - 75Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2008