This argument analysis will be derived from the book When Books Went to War, written by Molly Guptill Manning, who is an attorney at the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit. The book tells an interesting, not well known story of how books were given to soldiers during WW2 and ended up becoming an essential aspect of their lives. The soldiers would not have received these necessary literary escapes from the harshness of battle if it wasn’t for the massive effort of not only from the American Library Association, but America as a whole. In the book, chapter 8 focuses on the Soldier Voting Bill, which came up for revision in 1944, and sparked a censorship fiasco. That’s when senator Robert Taft, who opposed a fourth term for
Grandfather falls asleep but mattie goes to get water. When she returns she falls asleep and dreams about her grandfather fighting in the war. When Mattie wakes up she is in the hospital. She asks a nurse how she got there and the woman said she was found ill and brought to the hospital, she got yellow fever but soon recovered. So Mattie and her grandfather return to their house but no one is there and windows were smashed and all there food was stolen.
Fever Essay History has many amazing events. The Revolutionary War is a great example of one. Another interesting event of history is the yellow fever epidemic which occurred in Philadelphia in 1793. In the book Fever by Laurie Halse Anderson, the author details Mathilda Cook’s personal journey from a typical teen into a young adult while the Yellow Fever epidemic devastates everything around her.
Necessity of Battle: Shelby Foote’s Perspective Political, economic, and social factors all fueled the start of the Civil War, and these causes continued to divide the nation throughout the war. These elements of influence overpowered the ability to come to an agreement through debate over the differing opinions; therefore, the Civil War started due to war necessity since fighting could end the disagreements. The North and South failed to come to a compromise, so they both fought a war in a deadly fashion. The Civil War resulted in more American casualties than any other previous war. After each military campaign, Shelby Foote calculates the number of deaths of the North and South and totals them.
The Unbeatable Souls The Lost Battalion is based totally on a real story of an American battalion that was sent out to battle during the World War I. Major Charles Whittlesey, a New York lawyer, who ends up in the trenches of France having under his command mostly young, unexperienced men. When Whittlesey and his battalion of five hundred men are ordered to advance into the Argonne Forest they find themselves surrounded by Germans troops when the other battalions instantly withdrew, leaving Whittlesey’s battalion on his own. Confined behind enemy lines, Whittlesey’s battalion turned into the only force in the German army’s plans to move forward. Trapped and with no other way to rescue, Whittlesey is given an opportunity to surrender, but chose to continue fighting and keep his men together.
Jill Lepore used quotes and images from English colonists and portraits to show how colonists wrote about their experiences during King Philip’s War and how the narrative of the war has changed throughout the centuries. It also sets how colonists will narrate wars for future centuries. She spoked about how their writings of the war had a consequence of temporally silencing the Native Americans version on the war and how people have forgotten or even have any knowledge of the war. She uses a Boston merchant, Nathaniel Saltonstall account tilted “A true but brief account of our losses since this cruel and mischievous war begun” written in July 1676 year after the war had begun. He lists towns such as Narragansett, Warwick, Seekonk and Springfield
There were around 60,000 fallen or missing soldiers in the Vietnam War. All of the soldiers who survived were treated harshly by the ones they thought were their friends and family. Years later, the soldiers who served in the war were recognized once and for all by a twenty-one year old college student, named Maya Ying Lin. She was the winner of the design competition for the Vietnam War Memorial, the one which stands in Washington DC today. The event was very significant to American history, a story which an author wrote about.
World War II is an area of history researched by many scholars and amateurs from all walks of life. Unfortunately, some aspects of this international event have been widely ignored. Thus, many books on unknown aspects of history are forced to balance informing about the event and creating an argument within its history. As such, Melissa Amateis Marsh’s book, Nebraska POW Camps: A History of World War II Prisoners in the Heartland, was a refreshing read on a forgotten event close to home for Nebraskans. Although, Melissa Marsh’s argument of the Nebraska POW camps appeared extremely biased by only discussing positive POW experiences, with few negative experiences mentioned.
Oklahoma City Bombing Introduction The Oklahoma City bombing was a tragic day for America and many Americans. It would change the way terrorism was looked at in the eyes of humanity. The Oklahoma City bombing was carried out and planned by timothy McVeigh.
In my paper I will be going over two novels, comparing the way that these two authors presented and remembered their war experiences. The two novels that we have just read, were Goodbye, Darkness: A Memoir of the Pacific War by William Manchester
“Mankind must put an end to war, or war will put an end to mankind” (John F. Kennedy). In the novel The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien he wrote stories about what being in Vietnam war was like. O’Brien wrote the book nonlinear because that is how he remembered the stories. Tim O’Brien let readers get a first hand look on what war is like and what it can really do to someone who was in war. Tim O’Brien used the themes shame/guilt and storytelling/memory to let people who want to understand what war is like to get a better understanding and what it does to a soldier mentally and physically.
In the address, “The Role of American Women in Wartime”, Clare Boothe Luce, an American congresswoman, advocates for the American women’s contribution to the war efforts at the women's banking committee. Although Luce’s speech opens with a controversial and condemning topic, Luce further explicates it, recognizing the struggles and difficulties that must be dealt with. Luce employs contrasting and critical tone, repetition, and imagery to highlight women’s needed sacrifices for the sake of America’s victory. Luce introduces with a contrasting and critical tone in order to emphasize that an adjustment must occur for the female system in America.
In Soldier from the War Returning, Thomas Childers writes that “a curious silence lingers over what for many was the last great battle of the war.” This final battle was the soldier’s return home. After World War II, veterans came back to the United States and struggled with stigmatized mental illnesses as well as financial and social issues. During the war, many soldiers struggled with mental health issues that persisted after they came home.
“There is more than one way to burn a book. And the world is full of people running about with lit matches” (Bradbury, 1979, Coda). Molly Guptill Manning would argue that censoring a book is equivalent to burning it to ashes. Manning uses her own book, When Books Went to War, to convey an argument against Title V, an amendment to the 1944 Soldier Voting Bill created by Robert A. Taft that “placed restrictions on amusements distributed to the servicemen, including books, so long as they were provided by the government and made some reference to politics” (Manning, 2014, p. 135). The eighth chapter titled: “Censorship and FDR’s F---th T—m”, chronicles the proposal of Title V, its consequences, and its ultimate elimination.
Chris Hedges, a former war correspondent, has a memory overflowing with the horrors of many battlefields and the helplessness of those trapped within them. He applies this memory to write War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning, where he tutors us in the misery of war. To accomplish this goal, Hedges uses impactful imagery, appeals to other dissidents of war and classic writers, and powerful exemplification. Throughout his book, Hedges batters the readers with painful and grotesque, often first-hand, imagery from wars around the globe. He begins the book with his experience in Sarajevo, 1995.