Description

Book Synopsis

US society has controversially debated civil-military relationships and war trauma since the Vietnam War. Civic activists today promote Indigenous warrior traditions as role models for non-Native veteran reintegration and health care. They particularly stress the role of ritual and narrative for civil-military negotiations of war experience and for trauma therapy. Applying a cultural-comparative lens, this book reads non-Native soldiers’ and veterans’ life writing from post-9/11 wars as «ceremonial storytelling.» It analyzes activist academic texts, «milblogs» written in the war zone, as well as «homecoming scenarios.» Soldiers’ and veterans’ interactions with civilians constitute jointly constructed, narrative civic rituals that discuss the meaning of war experience and homecoming.



Table of Contents

Activist and academic US discourse on war experience and war trauma since Vietnam – Civil-military relationships – Cultural comparison with Indigenous warrior traditions – Military life writing understood as civic war rituals – «Milblogs» – «Homecoming scenarios» for returning veterans

Ceremonial Storytelling: Ritual and Narrative in

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    A Hardback by Frank Usbeck

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG
      Publication Date: 29/03/2019
      ISBN13: 9783631771457, 978-3631771457
      ISBN10: 3631771452

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      US society has controversially debated civil-military relationships and war trauma since the Vietnam War. Civic activists today promote Indigenous warrior traditions as role models for non-Native veteran reintegration and health care. They particularly stress the role of ritual and narrative for civil-military negotiations of war experience and for trauma therapy. Applying a cultural-comparative lens, this book reads non-Native soldiers’ and veterans’ life writing from post-9/11 wars as «ceremonial storytelling.» It analyzes activist academic texts, «milblogs» written in the war zone, as well as «homecoming scenarios.» Soldiers’ and veterans’ interactions with civilians constitute jointly constructed, narrative civic rituals that discuss the meaning of war experience and homecoming.



      Table of Contents

      Activist and academic US discourse on war experience and war trauma since Vietnam – Civil-military relationships – Cultural comparison with Indigenous warrior traditions – Military life writing understood as civic war rituals – «Milblogs» – «Homecoming scenarios» for returning veterans

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