Teaching Hearts and Minds: College Students Reflect on the Vietnam War in Literature.

1995 ◽  
Vol 66 (1) ◽  
pp. 97
Author(s):  
Phoebe S. Spinrad ◽  
Barry M. Kroll
1993 ◽  
Vol 44 (2) ◽  
pp. 272
Author(s):  
Lucille Capra ◽  
Barry Kroll ◽  
Larry R. Johannessen ◽  
Eric James Schroeder

2014 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 27-52
Author(s):  
Nicholas J. Schlosser

Scholars of the Vietnam War contend that the U.S. had two distinct strategic options for fighting the war: attrition and pacification. While the overall American commander, General William Westmoreland, embraced attrition through search-and-destroy, the Marine Corps favored pacification. Critics of Westmoreland have contended that pacification, which entailed protecting the South Vietnamese and winning over their hearts-and-minds, was a better approach that could have brought about a successful outcome to the war. The recent declassification of Marine Corps records requires us to reappraise what pacification actually involved however. These records demonstrate that the Marine Corps believed a successful pacification strategy in Vietnam demanded a substantial expansion of the war into North Vietnam and bordering states and a multi-decade commitment of U.S. forces to Southeast Asia. Ultimately, the Marine Corps approach did not differ substantially from Westmoreland’s and was no more likely a means of achieving victory within the limitations stipulated by the Johnson Administration.


Author(s):  
Simeon Man

This chapter reconsiders the origins of the Vietnam War by foregrounding U.S.-Philippine colonial history. It discusses the U.S. counterinsurgency in South Vietnam in 1954–1956 that mobilized the intimacies of Filipino doctors, nurses, and veterans to help win the hearts and minds of the Vietnamese. Their military, affective, and ideological labor, I argue, was crucial to the U.S. effort to depict counterinsurgency as a benevolent enterprise, antithetical to a colonial race war. At the same time, these efforts could not contain the rising tide of anticolonial nationalism in the Philippines and South Vietnam that emerged by the end of the 1950s.


1997 ◽  
Vol 69 (2) ◽  
pp. 434
Author(s):  
Paul Hansom ◽  
Michael Bibby

2013 ◽  
Vol 23 (2) ◽  
pp. 65-76
Author(s):  
Luiz Carlos Moreira da Rocha

The literature of war, independently of genre, tends to record the causes of the conflict, which are generally political and economic. But, it also tends to appoint a kind of aesthetics of reception, in other words, how the conflict is felt and registered by the experiences of the individual, whether soldier, writer, journalist or common reader. In Dispatches, the fantasies of the grunts, the allusions to the theory of dominoes, the necessity to win the hearts and minds of the Vietnamese people, and the role of the press are condensed in this remarkable non-fictional narrative.


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