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Curating and Re-Curating the American Wars in Vietnam and Iraq

Autor Christine Sylvester
en Limba Engleză Hardback – mai 2019
We have long saved--and curated--objects from wars to commemorate the war experience. These objects appear at national museums and memorials and are often mentioned in war novels and memoirs. Through them we institutionalize narratives and memories of national identity, as well as international power and purpose. While people interpret war in different ways, and there is no ultimate authority on the experiences of any war, curators of war objects make different choices about what to display or write about, none of which are entirely problematic, good, or accurate. This book asks whose vantage points on war are made available, and where, for public consumption; it also questions whose war experiences are not represented, are minimized, or ignored in ways that advantage contemporary militarism. Christine Sylvester looks at four sites of war memory-the National Museum of American History, the Vietnam Veterans Memorial, Arlington National Cemetery, and selected novels and memoirs of the American wars in Vietnam and Iraq-to consider the way war knowledge is embedded in differing sites of memory and display. While the museum shows war aircraft and a laptop computer used by a journalist covering the American war in Iraq, visitors to the Vietnam Memorial or Arlington Cemetery find more prosaic and civilian items on view, such as baby pictures, slices of birthday cake, or even car keys. In addition, memoirs and novels of these wars tend to curate ghastly horrors of wars as experienced by soldiers or civilians. For Sylvester, these sites of war memory and curation provide ways to understand dispersed war authority and interpretation and to consider which sites invite viewers to revere a war and which reflect personal experiences that show the undersides of these wars. Sylvester shows that scholars, policymakers, and other citizens need to consider different types of situated memory and knowledge in order to fully grasp war, rather than idealize it.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780190840556
ISBN-10: 0190840552
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 236 x 160 x 28 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

Christine Sylvester has produced a book that retheorizes how war is represented. She does so through a series of unconventional framings and stories that push the boundaries of what has traditionally been conceived of as war studies. It is a masterful example of the way narrative work can generate knowledge, with key insights on the individual experience of war inside and outside the traditional war theater.
How do we remember? Who or what is left out of memory, and for what purposes? Similarly, who and for what reasons are others left in? Sylvester charts an evocative path through symbols, literary and artistic, that burns great holes through all that is merely official in the memories of war in Vietnam and Iraq.
This book makes an insightful and truly interdisciplinary contribution to the study of war. Drawing from Memory Studies, International Relations, Feminist Theory, Cultural Studies, and Ethnography, Professor Sylvester traces how difficult wars are mediated through official and localised curation practices-advancing, once again, our knowledge of war's ownership and warexperience in the contemporary era
Once again, Christine Sylvester wows the reader with her compelling, creative, and deeply intelligent way of asking and addressing the imperative questions of global politics. In this rich and wonderfully written book, Sylvester invites us on a fascinating journey through war museums and memorials, novels and memoirs, and compels us to revisit how we understand, remember, forget, and imagine war. This book is clearly a must-read for those who reflect on war, and its subjects, objects, and experiences within the fields of International Relations, War Studies, Critical Military Studies, and Feminist Theory, those who are touched by the specific wars addressed in these pages, and all of us who-by the mere fact that we live in today's global conjuncture-want to rethink militarism and warring
Focusing her attention on the 'objects' of war, Christine Sylvester challenges the discipline of International Relations to take account of the bodily and bloody effects of war. Demonstrating that war is experienced and felt long after its supposed 'end' and far away from its battle zones, and that authoritative knowledge of it is found in oft-ignored sites, this book is a vital corrective to a discipline that frequently de-peoples and sanitizes the act of warring.
"From her brilliant opening excursus of Pollock's 'Blue Poles' to her revelatory analysis of who remembers our contemporary wars, how, why, and to what aesthetic and political ends, Christine Sylvester's Curating and Re-curating the American Wars in Vietnam and Iraqis a stunning achievement. Lucidly written, powerfully argued, and beautifully illustrated, every insight of every chapter made me see these wars and their sites of memory as if for the first time. An exquisite 'tour de force' in every way." -- James E. Young, Distinguished Professor Emeritus, University of Massachusetts, Amherst

Notă biografică

Christine Sylvester is Professor of Political Science at the University of Connecticut, specializing in international relations, and professorial affiliate of the School of Global Studies at Gothenburg University. She has been the Swedish Research Council's Kerstin Hesselgren Professor for Sweden, recipient of an honorary degree in social sciences at Lund University, a Leverhulme fellow at SOAS, University of London, and a Humanities Institute fellow at the University of Connecticut. An International Studies Association eminent scholar of feminist theory and gender studies, she is also listed among Fifty Key Thinkers in International Relations. Her recent works related to this book include Art/Museums: International Relations Where We Least Expect It and War as Experience, as well as the edited books Masquerades of War and Experiencing War.