This project builds off historical and literary war theories about binaries to interrogate whether the nature of war writing has changed as war has changed. I analyze two Vietnam and two Iraq war novels for the ways they challenge or uphold the binaries of war, and how these binaries shift over time. I argue that the breakdown of a coherent ‘enemy’ due to the increase of a diffuse and decentralized insurgent force increasing from the Vietnam War to the Iraq War begins to collapse the binaries of ally versus enemy and combatant versus noncombatant in the countries in which the United States wages war. At the same time, the elimination of the American draft widens the gap between American soldiers and civilians as fewer and fewer Americans se...
In Friendly Fire: American Identity and the Literature of the Vietnam War I argue that the Vietnam W...
More than two million Americans have now served in Afghanistan or Iraq; more than 5,000 Americans ha...
Georgia Southern University faculty member William T. Allison authored The Novel and Vietnam in Th...
This project builds off historical and literary war theories about binaries to interrogate whether t...
In 1996, Samuel Huntington argued that the end of the Cold War Era marked the end of global instabil...
Beyond its identifiable military, economic, and political aspects, the Vietnam war was a supreme wor...
For many cultural commentators, the Persian Gulf War (1990-1991) signalled a new era in which techno...
Since ultimate military failure in the Vietnam War (1964–75), the United States has changed its mana...
This project examines American-authored Iraq War fiction within the context of public discourse. Giv...
U.S. political and military difficulties in Iraq have prompted comparisons to the American war in Vi...
The United States was throughout the history engaged in several conflicts which had a character of c...
U.S. political and military difficulties in Iraq have prompted comparisons to the American war in Vi...
Significant differences exist in Americans’ support for force between the 1991 Persian Gulf War and ...
This article aims to analyze the relevance of Carl von Clausewitz’s theory on Friction in War to the...
This article discusses the the lingering presence of the Vietnam Syndrome - the idea that military s...
In Friendly Fire: American Identity and the Literature of the Vietnam War I argue that the Vietnam W...
More than two million Americans have now served in Afghanistan or Iraq; more than 5,000 Americans ha...
Georgia Southern University faculty member William T. Allison authored The Novel and Vietnam in Th...
This project builds off historical and literary war theories about binaries to interrogate whether t...
In 1996, Samuel Huntington argued that the end of the Cold War Era marked the end of global instabil...
Beyond its identifiable military, economic, and political aspects, the Vietnam war was a supreme wor...
For many cultural commentators, the Persian Gulf War (1990-1991) signalled a new era in which techno...
Since ultimate military failure in the Vietnam War (1964–75), the United States has changed its mana...
This project examines American-authored Iraq War fiction within the context of public discourse. Giv...
U.S. political and military difficulties in Iraq have prompted comparisons to the American war in Vi...
The United States was throughout the history engaged in several conflicts which had a character of c...
U.S. political and military difficulties in Iraq have prompted comparisons to the American war in Vi...
Significant differences exist in Americans’ support for force between the 1991 Persian Gulf War and ...
This article aims to analyze the relevance of Carl von Clausewitz’s theory on Friction in War to the...
This article discusses the the lingering presence of the Vietnam Syndrome - the idea that military s...
In Friendly Fire: American Identity and the Literature of the Vietnam War I argue that the Vietnam W...
More than two million Americans have now served in Afghanistan or Iraq; more than 5,000 Americans ha...
Georgia Southern University faculty member William T. Allison authored The Novel and Vietnam in Th...