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In this vibrant and dynamic book-length study drawing on a broad tapestry of research, Terence McSweeney offers an exploration of The Hurt Locker (2009), its stylistic and narrative devices, its cultural impact, its reception, and its relationship to the genre of the war film. McSweeney places the film in a richly textured historical, political, and industrial context, arguing that The Hurt Locker is part of a long tradition of films about American wars that play a considerable role in how audiences come to understand the conflicts that they depict. Thus, films about a nation’s wars are never “only a movie” but rather should be considered a cultural battleground themselves on which a war of representation is waged.
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Film --- Iraq --- Hurt Locker, The (Film) --- Hurt Locker, The (Motion picture) --- No True Glory (Film) --- No True Glory (Motion picture) --- Propaganda --- Iraq War, 2003-2011 --- Propagande --- Guerre en Irak, 2003-2011 --- Motion pictures and war --- War films --- History and criticism --- Mass media and war
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In Hymns for the Fallen, Todd Decker listens closely to forty years of Hollywood combat films produced after Vietnam. Ever a noisy genre, post-Vietnam war films have deployed music and sound to place the audience in the midst of battle and to provoke reflection on the experience of combat. Considering landmark movies-such as Apocalypse Now, Saving Private Ryan, The Thin Red Line, Black Hawk Down, The Hurt Locker, and American Sniper-as well as lesser-known films, Decker shows how the domain of sound, an experientially rich and culturally resonant aspect of cinema, not only invokes the realities of war, but also shapes the American audience's engagement with soldiers and veterans as flesh-and-blood representatives of the nation. Hymns for the Fallen explores all three elements of film sound-dialogue, sound effects, music-and considers how expressive and formal choices in the soundtrack have turned the serious war film into a patriotic ritual enacted in the commercial space of the cinema.
Film soundtracks --- Motion picture music --- War films --- Motion picture soundtracks --- Movie soundtracks --- Soundtracks, Film --- Soundtracks, Motion picture --- Soundtracks, Movie --- Sound recordings --- History and criticism. --- War films History and criticism --- History and criticism --- american film. --- american sniper. --- apocalypse now. --- battle. --- black hawk down. --- cinema studies. --- cinema. --- combat films. --- combat training. --- combat. --- dialogue. --- film analysis. --- film music. --- film soundtrack. --- film studies. --- films about war. --- hollywood. --- hurt locker. --- movies about war. --- patriotic. --- saving private ryan. --- soldiers. --- sound effects. --- thin red line. --- veterans. --- vietnam war films. --- vietnam war movies. --- vietnam war. --- vietnam. --- war films. --- war movies. --- wartime.
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Our collective memories of World War II and Vietnam have been shaped as much by memoirs, novels, and films as they have been by history books. In Welcome to the Suck, Stacey Peebles examines the growing body of contemporary war stories in prose, poetry, and film that speak to the American soldier's experience in the Persian Gulf War and the Iraq War. Stories about war always encompass ideas about initiation, masculinity, cross-cultural encounters, and trauma. Peebles shows us how these timeless themes find new expression among a generation of soldiers who have grown up in a time when it has been more acceptable than ever before to challenge cultural and societal norms, and who now have unprecedented and immediate access to the world away from the battlefield through new media and technology. Two Gulf War memoirs by Anthony Swofford (Jarhead) and Joel Turnipseed (Baghdad Express) provide a portrait of soldiers living and fighting on the cusp of the major political and technological changes that would begin in earnest just a few years later. The Iraq War, a much longer conflict, has given rise to more and various representations. Peebles covers a blog by Colby Buzzell ("My War"), memoirs by Nathaniel Fick (One Bullet Away) and Kayla Williams (Love My Rifle More Than You); a collection of stories by John Crawford (The Last True Story I'll Ever Tell); poetry by Brian Turner (Here, Bullet); the documentary Alive Day Memories; and the feature films In the Valley of Elah and the winner of the 2010 Oscar for Best Picture, The Hurt Locker, both written by the war correspondent Mark Boal. Books and other media emerging from the conflicts in the Gulf have yet to receive the kind of serious attention that Vietnam War texts received during the 1980's and 1990's. With its thoughtful and timely analysis, Welcome to the Suck will provoke much discussion among those who wish to understand today's war literature and films and their place in the tradition of war representation more generally.
Iraq War, 2003-2011 --- Persian Gulf War, 1991 --- Anglo-American Invasion of Iraq, 2003-2011 --- Dawn, Operation New, 2010-2011 --- Gulf War II, 2003-2011 --- Iraqi Freedom, Operation, 2003-2010 --- New Dawn, Operation, 2010-2011 --- Operation Iraqi Freedom, 2003-2010 --- Operation New Dawn, 2010-2011 --- Operation Telic, 2003-2011 --- Persian Gulf War, 2003-2011 --- Telic, Operation, 2003-2011 --- War on Terrorism, 2001-2009 --- Desert Storm, Operation, 1991 --- Gulf War, 1991 --- Operation Desert Storm, 1991 --- War in the Gulf, 1991 --- Iraq-Kuwait Crisis, 1990-1991 --- Motion pictures and the war. --- Literature and the war. --- Personal narratives [American ] --- Literature and the war --- Motion pictures and war --- Swofford, Anthony --- Turnipseed, Joel --- Buzzell, Colby --- Fick, Nathaniel --- Williams, Kayla --- Crawford, John --- Turner, Brian --- Alive Day Memories: Home from Iraq (Documentary film) --- In the Valley of Elah (Motion picture) --- Hurt Locker, The (Motion picture)
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