Unacknowledged Casualties of the Vietnam War: Experiences of Partners of New Zealand Veterans

1996 ◽  
Vol 6 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-70 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lesley G. Frederikson ◽  
Kerry Chamberlain ◽  
Nigel Long
2021 ◽  
pp. 107780042110423
Author(s):  
Anh Ngoc Quynh Phan

The poetic narrative recounts a story of a Vietnamese refugee daughter I met in New Zealand. Her experience of family separation and dispersion when her parents decided to flee the country after the Vietnam war ended in 1975 evoked a sense of trauma, a collective trauma of thousands of Vietnamese who suffered from losses: “their country,” their home, their families, and their place, to the oceans they crossed. Many of them never had the future they thought they would when they stepped on the overcrowded, half-sunk boat into the dark and could not manage to see the light.


2021 ◽  
Vol 36 (1) ◽  
pp. 183-195
Author(s):  
Aleksandra Musiał

This article discusses several American texts about the war in Vietnam, paying particular attention to Michael Herr’s memoir Dispatches and Gustav Hasford’s The Short­Timers. Using Paul Fussell’s model of the ironic pattern of war experiences recounted in literary texts authored by soldier-writers, the article argues that the close entanglement of the poetics of fear and a sense of Fussellian irony permeate the representations of the Vietnam War in these, as well as in other American books. The article also attempts to briefly categorise the representations of fear in several narratives of the war.


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