Paco's Memories

Paco's Memories
Author: Linda Amnawah
Publisher: iUniverse
Total Pages: 112
Release: 2001-11
Genre: Conduct of life
ISBN: 0595205151

Paco's Memories is a collection of four fictional stories told by an elderly Hispanic man. These stories all feature characters of Puerto Rican heritage and are meant to inspire children to do good. Each story has a moral.

Discursive Remembering

Discursive Remembering
Author: Lucas M. Bietti
Publisher: Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG
Total Pages: 151
Release: 2014-10-14
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 3110387468

This book aims at building a bridge between the social and political aspects of remembering and the cognitive and discourse processes driving such activities. By analyzing these cognitive and discursive processes, Bietti explores practices of individual and collective remembering in institutional and private settings in relation to periods of political violence in Argentina. This books begins to fill the conceptual gap between cognitive oriented approaches to remembering that draw conclusions about how memory functions in the mind without a detailed discourse analysis of the communicative interaction in which this process unfolds, and the discourse and pragmatic oriented approaches that are mainly interested in analyzing the rhetorical features of conversational remembering, in some cases disregarding that there are underlying cognitive mechanisms that drive the construction of discourses about past experiences. The empirical analysis shows that individual and collective remembering in relation to periods of political violence in Argentina vary in pragmatic ways due to the fact that these accounts of the past were constructed with reference to the communicative situation. Thus, this book also aims at shedding new light on the current practices of commemoration and remembrance related to periods of political violence in Argentina, in public and private settings.

A Time for Peace

A Time for Peace
Author: Robert D. Schulzinger
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 289
Release: 2006
Genre: History
ISBN: 0195365925

Prominent American historian Robert D. Schulzinger sheds light on how deeply etched memories of the devastating conflict in Vietnam have altered America's political, social, and cultural landscape. Schulzinger examines the impact of the war from many angles. He ranges from the heated controversy over soldiers who were missing in action, to the influx of over a million Vietnam refugees into the US, to the many ways the war has continued to be fought in books and films and, perhaps most important, the power of the Vietnam War as a metaphor influencing foreign policy in places like Iraq.

Memory, Allegory, and Testimony in South American Theater

Memory, Allegory, and Testimony in South American Theater
Author: Ana Elena Puga
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 297
Release: 2008-05-05
Genre: Art
ISBN: 113589924X

In this timely study, Puga compares contemporary Southern Cone playwrights and their aesthetic strategies for subverting ideologies of dictatorship; in the process, she traces the shaping of a resistant identity in memory, its direct expression in testimony, and its indirect elaboration in two different kinds of allegory.

Ideologies of Forgetting

Ideologies of Forgetting
Author: Gina Marie Weaver
Publisher: State University of New York Press
Total Pages: 219
Release: 2012-02-01
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 1438430000

First book to study rape and sexual abuse of Vietnamese women by U.S. soldiers during the Vietnam War.

Cecilia’s Magical Mission

Cecilia’s Magical Mission
Author: Viola Canales
Publisher: Arte Publico Press
Total Pages: 314
Release: 2020-10-31
Genre: Young Adult Fiction
ISBN: 1518505619

Everyone in fourteen-year-old Cecilia’s Mexican-American community has a don—a special gift or talent. Her father, who’s named after St. Anthony, helps people find things, or parts of themselves, that they’ve lost. Paco, the janitor in the building where she lives, can tell fortunes. Cecilia can’t figure out hers, and she really needs to since her confirmation is coming up. The truth is, Cecilia doesn’t really believe people have celestial gifts. Her opinion begins to change when she gets apprenticed to Dona Faustina, who has a magic way with coffee. Soon Cecilia realizes that her apprenticeship involves something more sinister than a mystical brew! And on a trip back to the special Mexican village of Santa Cecilia, she and her friends Julie and Lebna learn something about friendship, community and the powers of good and evil. Award-winning author Viola Canales returns with an appealing novel for teens that highlights a Mexican-American immigrant community and the conflict first-generation young adults experience caught between contemporary American life and their parents’ traditional ways.

How White Men Won the Culture Wars

How White Men Won the Culture Wars
Author: Joseph Darda
Publisher: University of California Press
Total Pages: 277
Release: 2021-05-25
Genre: History
ISBN: 0520381440

Reuniting white America after Vietnam. “If war among the whites brought peace and liberty to the blacks,” Frederick Douglass asked in 1875, peering into the nation’s future, “what will peace among the whites bring?” The answer then and now, after civil war and civil rights: a white reunion disguised as a veterans’ reunion. How White Men Won the Culture Wars shows how a broad contingent of white men––conservative and liberal, hawk and dove, vet and nonvet––transformed the Vietnam War into a staging ground for a post–civil rights white racial reconciliation. Conservatives could celebrate white vets as deracinated embodiments of the nation. Liberals could treat them as minoritized heroes whose voices must be heard. Erasing Americans of color, Southeast Asians, and women from the war, white men could agree, after civil rights and feminism, that they had suffered and deserved more. From the POW/MIA and veterans’ mental health movements to Rambo and “Born in the U.S.A.,” they remade their racial identities for an age of color blindness and multiculturalism in the image of the Vietnam vet. No one wins in a culture war—except, Joseph Darda argues, white men dressed in army green.

Paco's Story

Paco's Story
Author: Larry Heinemann
Publisher: Vintage
Total Pages: 224
Release: 2010-05-05
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 0307539628

Paco Sullivan is the only man in Alpha Company to survive a cataclysmic Viet Cong attack on Fire Base Harriette in Vietnam. Everyone else is annihilated. When a medic finally rescues Paco almost two days later, he is waiting to die, flies and maggots covering his burnt, shattered body. He winds up back in the US with his legs full of pins, daily rations of Librium and Valium, and no sense of what to do next. One evening, on the tail of a rainstorm, he limps off the bus and into the small town of Boone, determined to find a real job and a real bed–but no matter how hard he works, nothing muffles the anguish in his mind and body. Brilliantly and vividly written, Paco’s Story–winner of a National Book Award–plunges you into the violence and casual cruelty of the Vietnam War, and the ghostly aftermath that often dealt the harshest blows.

Arriving Where We Started

Arriving Where We Started
Author: Barbara Probst Solomon
Publisher: Great Marsh Press
Total Pages: 228
Release: 1998
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781928863014

A memoir about an American girl's personal odyssey in post-World War II Europe, "Arriving Where We Started" offers "a deeply engaging, marvelously intelligent story about growing up . . ." ("The New York Times").

The Routledge Introduction to American War Literature

The Routledge Introduction to American War Literature
Author: Jennifer Haytock
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 308
Release: 2018-05-11
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1317422627

War and violence have arguably been some of the strongest influences on literature, but the relation is complex: more than just a subject for story-telling, war tends to reshape literature and culture. Modern war literature necessarily engages with national ideologies, and this volume looks at the specificity of how American literature deals with the emotional, intellectual, social, political, and economic contradictions that evolve into and out of war. Raising questions about how American ideals of independence and gender affect representations of war while also considering how specifically American experiences of race and class interweave with representations of combat, this book is a rich and coherent introduction to these texts and critical debates.