Amazon.com: Tangled Memories: The Vietnam War, the AIDS Epidemic, and the Politics of Remembering (9780520206205): Marita Sturken: Books


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Tangled Memories: The Vietnam War, the AIDS Epidemic, and the Politics of Remembering [Paperback]

Marita Sturken (Author)

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Book Description

February 28, 1997 0520206207 978-0520206205 1
Analyzing the ways U.S. culture has been formed and transformed in the 80s and 90s by its response to the Vietnam War and the AIDS epidemic, Marita Sturken argues that each has disrupted our conventional notions of community, nation, consensus, and "American culture." She examines the relationship of camera images to the production of cultural memory, the mixing of fantasy and reenactment in memory, the role of trauma and survivors in creating cultural comfort, and how discourses of healing can smooth over the tensions of political events.
Sturken's discussion encompasses a brilliant comparison of the Vietnam Veterans Memorial and the AIDS Quilt; her profound reading of the Memorial as a national wailing wall--one whose emphasis on the veterans and war dead has allowed the discourse of heroes, sacrifice, and honor to resurface at the same time that it is an implicit condemnation of war--is particularly compelling. The book also includes discussions of the Kennedy assassination, the Persian Gulf War, the Challenger explosion, and the Rodney King beating. While debunking the image of the United States as a culture of amnesia, Sturken also shows how remembering itself is a form of forgetting, and how exclusion is a vital part of memory formation.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

In Tangled Memories, Marita Sturken attempts to explain how events take on cultural meaning through what she calls "technologies of memory," primarily monuments, texts, icons and images. She argues memory has as much to do with fantasy and invention as with truth and that it attains a narrative form separate from history and possessed of its own political significance. Although it focuses primarily on the Vietnam War and the AIDS epidemic, her book also takes in the Kennedy assassination, the Challenger explosion, the beating of Rodney King, and the Gulf War. Sturken's conclusions are often belabored: that the American Vietnam memorial fails to capture the horrors brought upon the Vietnamese people is a rather unoriginal and obvious insight she blames on the "underlying nationalism of the Washington Mall." Does the AIDS quilt she documents likewise obscure the worldwide ravages of the disease when spread upon the Mall? The theoretical discussion of memory and representation often bogs down in the political positions the author assumes rather than defends. One of the pities of such difficult exposition is that a relatively superb chapter on the Gulf War is "forgotten,"a mere 22 pages of her 358-page book. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Booklist

Where some see U.S. culture as amnesiac, Sturken, of the University of Southern California' Annenberg School for Communication, analyzes key events of the past several decades and argues "cultural memory is a central aspect of how American culture functions and how the nation is defined." (Sturken's memory is Foucaultian, integrating "elements of remembrance, fantasy, and invention . . . in an active, engaging practice of creating meaning.") She focuses primarily on the Vietnam War and AIDS: national traumas that "disrupted definitions of family, gender, morality, and the nation" and "produced very rich kinds of memories and memory debates," including resonant representations in the Wall in Washington, D.C., and the NAMES Project AIDS Memorial Quilt. Sturken also assesses the impact on national culture of other recent events--from the assassinations of the sixties and the Challenger explosion to the Gulf War and the Rodney King beating--and explores disparate effects of various media: still photos, amateur film and video, Hollywood docudrama, and TV news. Appropriate for social-science collections where cultural studies circulate. Mary Carroll --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
Memory is often embodied in objects-memorials, texts, talismans, images. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
cultural reenactment, quilt panels, veterans memorial, documentary images, activist art, cultural memory, national meaning, biomedical discourse, quilt display, women veterans
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Vietnam War, Gulf War, Vietnam Veterans Memorial, United States, Jac Wall, World War, Rodney King, Fourth of July, Washington Mall, Maya Lin, Memorial Quilt, San Francisco, National Geographic, Full Metal, Kim Phuc, Los Angeles, Oliver Stone, Washington Monument, Bodies of Commemoration, Lincoln Memorial, Cold War, Cleve Jones, Frederick Hart, Native American, Reginald Denny
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