ECU Libraries Catalog

Hollywood's imperial wars : the Vietnam generation and the American myth of heroic continuity / Armando José Prats.

Author/creator Prats, A. J., 1948- author.
Format Book and Print
Publication Info Norman : University of Oklahoma Press, [2024]
Copyright Notice ©2024
Descriptionxvi, 316 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Subject(s)
Contents "Heirs of Natty Bumppo"; or, what Mrs. Collingwood saw : westering empires and the heroic Inheritance in Fort Apache and The real glory -- Heroic genealogies and the anxiety of legacy : the two flag raisings, sands of Iwo Jima, and The "year of shocks" -- His "children rawly left" : John Wayne's "Boys" and the Vietnam generation -- The heroic imperative, the lost war, and the rupture -- Two narratives of the rupture : The deer hunter and Coming home -- " A kingdom diseased like himself" : Apocalypse now and the embodied rupture -- After John Wayne : mythic legacies, Clint Eastwood, and the paths to American sniper.
Abstract "The history of Hollywood depictions, and the historical context in which they were created, of US military involvement with racial 'others' from the Indian Wars through Vietnam to the War on Terror"-- Provided by publisher.
Abstract "When the Vietnam War punctured the myth of American military invincibility, Hollywood needed a new kind of war movie. The familiar triumphal narrative was relegated to history and, with it, the heroic legacy that had passed from one generation to the next for more than two hundred years. How Hollywood helped create and instill the American myth of heroic continuity, and how films revised that myth after the Vietnam War, is what Armando José Prats explores in Hollywood's Imperial Wars. The book offers a new way of understanding the cultural and historical significance of Vietnam in relation to Hollywood's earlier representations of Americans at war, from the mythic heroism of a film like Sands of Iwo Jima to the rupture of that myth in films such as The Deer Hunter, Apocalypse Now, and Platoon. As early as the mid-1940s, Prats suggests, fears aroused by the Cold War were stirring anxieties about sustaining the heroic myth-anxieties reflected in the insistent, aggressive patriotism in films of the period. In this context, Prats considers the immeasurable cultural importance of John Wayne, the cinematic apotheosis of wartime valor and righteousness, whose patriotism was nonetheless deeply compromised by his not having served in World War II. Prats reveals how historical and cultural anxieties emerge in well-known Vietnam movies, in which characters inspired by the heroes of the Second World War are denied the heroic legacy of their fathers. American war movies, in Prats's analysis, were forever altered by the loss in Vietnam. Even movies like American Sniper that exalt war heroes are marked as much by the failure of the heroic tropes of old Hollywood war movies as by the tragic turn of actual historical events. Tracing what Prats calls the "anxiety of legacy" through the films of the World War II and post-Vietnam War periods, this book offers a new way of looking at both the Hollywood war movie and the profound cultural shifts it reflects and refracts. "-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography noteIncludes bibliographical references, filmography, and index.
Genre/formCriticism, interpretation, etc.
LCCN 2023043161
ISBN9780806193755
ISBN0806193751 (hardcover)

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