Reflectons in the Times of Vietnam
The time is spring, the year is 1961 and president Kennedy has sent 400 special forces into South Vietnam. This was the start of a new era in United States history as well as the beginning of a literary revolution. A time when books had powerful views, and songs were of peace or of governmental corruption, and plays or movies were about gruesome wars in strange jungles. This was a time to express reality in words. Then came the press. All of the governments' secrets and lies were exposed. "Only a free and understanding press can effectively expose deception in government." [Justice Hugo L. Black 1] on the release of The Pentagon Papers. The people were torn. Some wanted to know, and some liked their own worlds of denial. Still even today there are people who say that we never entered into the Vietnamese conflict. Others are living proof, walking aftershocks in the form of P.O.W's and victims of the chemical agent orange. All of these people were changed forever. People who wake up in fear due to flashbacks of seeing their friend shot and killed two feet away from them. This is Vietnam, and these are reflections of the times. One of the most influenced areas of literature
The songs by Rage are so high powered and emotionally charged and front man Zach de la Rocha wasn't even alive then. It just shows how if enough people believe in something strongly enough it can stay alive for decades. The primary accomplishment is the anti-war movement that so many Americans have joined in. It has spawned over thirty years of songs, books, movies, and poems. During this period he also wrote fiction as well as nonfiction pieces. This movie paints a picture of how people were turned into killers, boys fresh out of high school forced to kill or die. Another look at Vietnam is Winston Groom's movie Forest Gump (1994). Ehrhert, Marilyn McMahon, and Yusef Komunyakaa. Vietnam - one of the most violent and extensive wars in American history. All the drugs and deaths are shown in raw, uncensored reality. It started in the beginning with the book If I Die in a Combat Zone (1973), an autobiographical look at the lives of soldiers in the war. The characters are shown spending their days cleaning out foxholes and roaming through the fierce jungle.
Common topics in this essay:
Forest Gump,
Spring Field,
Pentagon Papers,
Khe Shan,
Combat Zone,
South Vietnam,
Vietnamese War,
Dead Presidents,
O'Brien O'Brien,
Times Vietnam,
anti-war movement,
literary revolution,
people entered,
bruce weigl,
american history,
reflections times,
|