This thesis seeks to examine how a particularly American ideological formation called the frontier myth has been re-enacted, challenged, and redefined in the literary works written by several American authors. Existing researches about the pervasiveness of the frontier mythology in American culture written by scholars such as Richard Slotkin, Richard Drinnon, and others demonstrate that, as the myth of the frontier–––the popular discourse that romanticizes early white settlers’ violent confrontation with American Indians in the New World wilderness–––has been deeply inscribed in America’s collective consciousness, when they faced with the war in a remote Southeast Asian country, many Americans have adopted its conventional narrative pattern...
In this project I consider the process of narrative construction in Vietnam War memoirs and oral his...
William V. Spanos\u27s chapter Vietnam and the Pax Americana: A Genealogy of the \u27New World Orde...
War Material: Vietnam and Transpacific Imaginaries of Capital and Transition argues that the slaught...
This thesis seeks to examine how a particularly American ideological formation called the frontier m...
Reading the landscape of Vietnam (the climate, the jungle, the topography) as an anthropomorphic cha...
This essay firstly focuses upon the images of a “diseased land” and “vermin–like natives” that were...
Drawing upon previous studies on American Vietnam War literature and the myth of the frontier, Amer...
The Vietnam War is evolving from contemporary memory into history. Fifty years on, it still serves a...
Among works treating Vietnam War history, few mention and none address extensively the folk culture ...
Beyond its identifiable military, economic, and political aspects, the Vietnam war was a supreme wor...
In the narrative prose of the Vietnam War--specifically Graham Greene's The Quiet American, Tim O'Br...
Novels and reminiscences written by Vietnam combat veterans are being published with increasing freq...
Empires are by their very nature a centrifugal affair; to become imperial is to somehow discredit bo...
In this thesis, I argue that few attempts were as effective in correcting the exceptionalist ethos o...
This dissertation investigates the underlying issues in American culture at the time of the Vietnam ...
In this project I consider the process of narrative construction in Vietnam War memoirs and oral his...
William V. Spanos\u27s chapter Vietnam and the Pax Americana: A Genealogy of the \u27New World Orde...
War Material: Vietnam and Transpacific Imaginaries of Capital and Transition argues that the slaught...
This thesis seeks to examine how a particularly American ideological formation called the frontier m...
Reading the landscape of Vietnam (the climate, the jungle, the topography) as an anthropomorphic cha...
This essay firstly focuses upon the images of a “diseased land” and “vermin–like natives” that were...
Drawing upon previous studies on American Vietnam War literature and the myth of the frontier, Amer...
The Vietnam War is evolving from contemporary memory into history. Fifty years on, it still serves a...
Among works treating Vietnam War history, few mention and none address extensively the folk culture ...
Beyond its identifiable military, economic, and political aspects, the Vietnam war was a supreme wor...
In the narrative prose of the Vietnam War--specifically Graham Greene's The Quiet American, Tim O'Br...
Novels and reminiscences written by Vietnam combat veterans are being published with increasing freq...
Empires are by their very nature a centrifugal affair; to become imperial is to somehow discredit bo...
In this thesis, I argue that few attempts were as effective in correcting the exceptionalist ethos o...
This dissertation investigates the underlying issues in American culture at the time of the Vietnam ...
In this project I consider the process of narrative construction in Vietnam War memoirs and oral his...
William V. Spanos\u27s chapter Vietnam and the Pax Americana: A Genealogy of the \u27New World Orde...
War Material: Vietnam and Transpacific Imaginaries of Capital and Transition argues that the slaught...