The Vietnam War and American Culture: 1945-2009 (26: 050:521; 26:352:509:02) Fall 2009
Professor H. Bruce
Franklin
Office: Hill 515
Phone: 973-353-5444
E-mail: hbf@andromeda.rutgers.edu
Office Hours: MON: 1:00-2:10; WED 2:30-4:00; and by appointment.
Home Page: http://andromeda.rutgers.edu/~hbf
REQUIRED TEXTS:
Vietnam and America, edited by Marvin Gettleman, Jane Franklin, Marilyn Young, and H. Bruce Franklin. Grove Press, 1995. (Abbreviated as V&A.) Note: Do not use any earlier edition of this book.
The Vietnam War in American
Stories, Songs, and Poems, edited by H. Bruce Franklin.
Graham Greene, The Quiet American. Penguin paperback.
W. D. Ehrhart, Passing Time.
Robert Stone, Dog Soldiers. Penguin paperback.
Tim O'Brien, In
the
(Any edition of these books by Greene, Ehrhart, Stone, and O'Brien is o.k., but page references in class discussion will be to these particular editions.)
MOVIES:
“
ASSIGNED
September 2: Organization, description, and methodology of the
seminar.
Video: "The Roots of a War" [shown in seminar].
September 9 In V&A: pp. 515-522 [On page 520, eight lines from bottom, please make the following correction: Change “January 16, 1961” to January 16, 1991. This is crucially important because it marks the beginning of the Iraq War.]; xiii-xv; 3-8; 15-28; 31-40; 46-48; 50-52; 65-76; 81-92; 97-105; 113-129. Graham Greene, The Quiet American (1955).
September 16 V&A: "The Revolution Against Diem" (pp. 133-136; 156-160; 165-201; 205-236); The Americanization of the War" (pp. 239-254). In ASSP: pp. 1-69 (INTRODUCTION; FICTION; Inside the War; Michael Paul McCusker, "The Old Man"; Larry Rottmann, "Thi Bong Dzu"; David Huddle, "The Interrogation of the Prisoner Bung by Mister Hawkins and Sergeant Tree"; George Davis, "Ben"; Tom Mayer, "Kafka for President"; Tim O'Brien, "The Man I Killed.")
September 23 V&A:
"The Movement Against the War" (pp. 295-300;
310-335). In ASSP: Ward Just, "The Congressman Who Loved
Flaubert"; Mary Hazzard, from Idle and
Disorderly Persons; Wayne Karlin,
"Moratorium"; Introduction to Poems (pp. 221-24); poems by W. D.
Ehrhart; Larry Rottmann, "What Kind of War?";
Horace Coleman, "OK Corral East/Brothers in the
Movie: "Only the Beginning" (1971) [shown in seminar.]
September 30 In ASSP: poems by Jan Barry, Richard M. Mishler, Stan Platke, Philip Appleman, Dale Ritterbusch, "Search and Destroy"; Larry Rottmann, "APO 96225," "For Cissy Shellabarger, R.N. Wherever You Are"; poems by Lady Borton; Sharon Grant; Penny Kettlewell; Basil T. Paquet; Yusef Komunyakaa; Frank A. Cross, Jr.; Bruce Weigl; June Jordan; Denise Levertov; Pedro Pietri; Luis Omar Salinas. In ASSP: Songs (pp. 205-220).
October 7 V&A:
"The Decisive Year, 1968" (pp. 339-409); "What Happened at
October 14 Robert
Stone, Dog Soldiers (1974. Note
that this novel was originally published the same year as the release of Hearts
and Minds).
Movie: Hearts and Minds (1974; Academy Award Winner for Best Documentary
Feature). [shown in seminar.]
October 21 V&A: pp. 427-437; 451-470. W. D. Ehrhart, Passing Time (1986).
October 28 In ASSP: Aftermaths (introduction); Ronald Anthony Cross, "The Heavenly Blue Answer"; Stephanie Vaughn, "Kid MacArthur"; Wayne Karlin, "The Last VC"; poems by John Balaban; Marilyn M. McMahon; Ron Carter; Joan A. Furey; Janice Mirikitani; Linda Van Devanter; Dale Ritterbusch, "At the Crash Site of a B-52: January 1994"; Larry Rottmann, "The Bones of an American M.I.A. Speak to the Members of the Joint Casualty Resolution Team"; "Thanks, Guys.” H. Bruce Franklin, “Missing in Action in the 21st Century” (to be posted on our listserve).
November 4 Tim O'Brien, In the
November 11 Presentations by members of the seminar.
November 18 Presentations by members of the seminar.
November 25 No meeting (Thanksgiving recess).
December 2 Presentations by members of the seminar.
December 9 Presentations by members of the seminar.
December 9 Final day for submission of original essay (minimum length 3,500 words). Extensions without penalty will be granted only for medical or other emergencies.
The essay must be an original work relating to one or more of the issues or works explored in the seminar. It should have something significant to communicate, and it should be worth its readers' time. Please note that after November 4, there is no assigned reading. This allows five weeks to spend on your essay, which is your only major project for the course. Your aim should be to produce a work of potentially publishable quality in both form and content.
The physical appearance of your work should be attractive and professional looking. Citations and format should follow the MLA Handbook for Writers of Research Papers or The Chicago Manual of Style.
Presentations by Members of the Seminar
Each member of the seminar will have 30 minutes to make a presentation and lead a discussion. When leading this discussion, you will be entirely in charge of the seminar. You may use this as an opportunity to develop your essay and get feedback on that project. You may use the time to pose problems you have encountered in developing your essay, to explore the subject of your essay more deeply, to present a brief version of your essay, or whatever you think most valuable. Or you may simply explore some issue, concern, or work we are studying. Before your presentation, you should supply all other members of the seminar with any written materials to be read in preparation. The easiest way to provide these materials is by e-mail through the listserve we’ll set up. Everybody needs to prepare for each discussion by studying the appropriate materials before that seminar meets.
Tests and Responsibility to Complete the
The success of the seminar depends on each member reading each assigned text on time and then contributing to our discussion on a level to be expected of a graduate student. If it becomes apparent that some people are not adequately prepared, it may be necessary to resort to brief tests on the readings the date they are due. Let’s try to avoid that. There will be no midterm or final examination.