Welcome to the Suck: Narrating the American Soldier's Experience in Iraq

Welcome to the Suck: Narrating the American Soldier's Experience in Iraq

by Stacey Peebles
Welcome to the Suck: Narrating the American Soldier's Experience in Iraq

Welcome to the Suck: Narrating the American Soldier's Experience in Iraq

by Stacey Peebles

Hardcover

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Overview

Our collective memories of World War II and Vietnam have been shaped as much by memoirs, novels, and films as they have been by history books. In Welcome to the Suck, Stacey Peebles examines the growing body of contemporary war stories in prose, poetry, and film that speak to the American soldier's experience in the Persian Gulf War and the Iraq War.

Stories about war always encompass ideas about initiation, masculinity, cross-cultural encounters, and trauma. Peebles shows us how these timeless themes find new expression among a generation of soldiers who have grown up in a time when it has been more acceptable than ever before to challenge cultural and societal norms, and who now have unprecedented and immediate access to the world away from the battlefield through new media and technology.

Two Gulf War memoirs by Anthony Swofford (Jarhead) and Joel Turnipseed (Baghdad Express) provide a portrait of soldiers living and fighting on the cusp of the major political and technological changes that would begin in earnest just a few years later. The Iraq War, a much longer conflict, has given rise to more and various representations. Peebles covers a blog by Colby Buzzell ("My War"), memoirs by Nathaniel Fick (One Bullet Away) and Kayla Williams (Love My Rifle More Than You); a collection of stories by John Crawford (The Last True Story I'll Ever Tell); poetry by Brian Turner (Here, Bullet); the documentary Alive Day Memories; and the feature films In the Valley of Elah and the winner of the 2010 Oscar for Best Picture, The Hurt Locker, both written by the war correspondent Mark Boal.

Books and other media emerging from the conflicts in the Gulf have yet to receive the kind of serious attention that Vietnam War texts received during the 1980s and 1990s. With its thoughtful and timely analysis, Welcome to the Suck will provoke much discussion among those who wish to understand today's war literature and films and their place in the tradition of war representation more generally.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780801449468
Publisher: Cornell University Press
Publication date: 04/15/2011
Pages: 200
Product dimensions: 6.10(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.90(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Stacey Peebles is Assistant Director of the Lloyd International Honors College, The University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments vii

Introduction 1

1 Lines of Sight: Watching War in Jarhead and My War: Killing Time in Iraq 23

2 Making a Military Man: Iraq, Gender, and the Failure of the Masculine Collective 49

3 Consuming the Other: Blinding Absence in The Last True Story I'll Ever Tell and Here, Bullet 101

4 One of U.S.: Combat Trauma on Film in Alive Day Memories and In the Valley of Elah 136

Conclusion 163

Notes 175

Bibliography 179

Index 189

What People are Saying About This

Susan Jeffords

Stacey Peebles's thoughtful book gives us a chance to see how the depictions of the war in Iraq are differentiated from those of the Vietnam War and how those differences are shaped by changes in media, understandings of trauma, constructions of gender, and how the war is perceived at home. If you're interested in how representations of war have changed in recent decades, this book should be on your shelf.

Andrew Hoberek

Welcome to the Suck provides a timely and essential revision of our understanding of contemporary war writing, surveying the ways in which recent books and films represent war and how this marks a change in our understanding of the subject. I am terrifically impressed with Peebles's notion that the media is a central concern of Gulf War and Iraq War narratives, which not only show their soldier characters modeling their own experiences on earlier war narratives but also incorporate/address new forms of media, such as blogs.

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