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    Soldiers and What They had to Endure: There is no single Vietnam experience among veterans of the war. I will try to give a small glimpse of what life could’ve been for you in Vietnam as a grunt. Remember, that is a person who is in the infantry. These people were generally in the thick of things and took the brunt of casualties. It is important to understand that there were many other military positions in Vietnam besides being a grunt.…

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    that veterans have to cope with when going back home. The emotional burdens and the painful rejection from family, society and government have a psychological impact on veterans that people at home would not understand. Because these soldiers fear of exile, fear the loss of reputation from society and from the people they love, they decides to go to war. Ironically, after return back from war, the veterans alienates by their family and by the country, which they fought for. This paper is helpful…

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    If I Die In A Combat Zone by Tim O’Brien If I Die In A Combat Zone is a memoir that depicts the horrors of Vietnam through the eyes of Tim O’Brien. Tim’s story is not told in chronological order, but his life before, during, and after the war are all depicted by the end of the book. Although the book is brief, it shows the development of Tim as he is forced to participate in a war that he disagrees with in its entirety. Although he originally plots to abandon the Army, he believes that doing…

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    took it out on an innocent animal. Every detail is vital for a war story, but the war story is never about war. The author wrote, “It’s about sunlight… It’s about the love and memory. It’s about sorrow. It’s about sisters who never write back and people who never listen” (O’Brien). The only truth to any war story was the…

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    In the short story written by Tim O'Brien, "The Things They Carried," O'Brien writes about a platoon of American soldiers fighting on the ground in the Vietnam War. He writes about the items soldiers carried on their backs and on their minds. This is similar to other wars such as the Gulf War in 1990. However, the technology, geographical features, and the politics of the two wars have several differences. There are similarities between Vietnam and Iraq: In both conflicts, there was pressure…

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    The Things They Carried Essay In the book The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien, the soldiers carried many things during the war that were linked to the person they were. The story takes place in 1960’s during the Vietnam war, and is a collection of short stories by Tim O’Brien who was drafted into the war in his early twenties. The book is based on events and emotions that affected him during the war, and in the first chapter he writes about all of the things that the men carried in Vietnam.…

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    The Things They Carried is a fictional account of the nature of men during the Vietnam War. The power of the novel comes from the blurring of the line between fiction and non-fiction. O’Brien used his actual memoir as a Vietnam soldier with a collection of what appears to be fictional short stories that he attributed to the members of his platoon. This style of writing shows that sometimes a person 's subjective thoughts and feelings about an event, which O 'Brien calls story-truth, is more…

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    find out if certain stories are true or not which causes the reader to become indulged in the selections of the chapters. Throughout the novel he describes the soldiers lives before and after, their experiences during the war, and how they changed as people when it all ended. Each chapter remains significantly different from the next, each has an important morality behind it and a lesson we all learn in our lives, also changing factors we come to approach. O’Brien gives insights into the…

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    “Over 20 years, more than 58,000 Americans were killed in Vietnam and more than 150,000 wounded, not to mention the emotional toll the war took on American culture.” (Blake 1 ) In Tim O’Brien’s novel “The Things They Carried” death was a daily occurrence, on both the American and the Vietnamese side. O’Brien writes about the function of memory, traditions of war literature and the difference between Tim as a soldier and Tim as a writer. Tim O 'Brien 's novel “The Things They Carried” is…

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    Vietnam War Analysis

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    matter much if it's dead . . . a VC nurse, fired by napalm, was a crisp critter. A Vietnamese baby, which lay nearby, was a roasted peanut (238-239)." This detachment made death easier to handle. Furthering the illusion that the dead were not really people, the men would interact with the corpses on a very dehumanizing level. For example, there was a corpse of an old man in a small town. "Dave Jensen went over and shook the old man's hand" and said "How-dee-doo (226)." " One by one the others…

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