Comparing 'Field Trip And' Camouflaging The Chimera

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Q3 Assessment First Draft: Literary Comparison
In the short story “Field Trip” by Tim O’Brien, the poem “Camouflaging the Chimera” by Yusef Komunyakaa, and the song “Fortunate Son” by Creedence Clearwater Revival, the authors feel the emotional reasoning for staying in the Vietnam War outweighed the diplomatic reasons that they were originally there for. For these soldiers, they were simply used by the government to enact on their orders, and in all events criticized and demoralized for doing so. In Tim O’Brien’s “Field Trip,” Yusef Komunyakaa’s “Camouflaging the Chimera,” and “Fortunate Son” by Creedence Clearwater Revival the way the soldiers rationalize the war is more emotional than the diplomacy the rich and powerful use. In Camouflaging …show more content…

In “Field Trip”, Kathleen’s childhood innocence leads her to asking her father about why he was so caught up on Vietnam even though he was there twenty years ago. When Kathleen finally tells her father he is weird because, “coming over here. Some dumb thing happens a long time ago and you can’t ever forget it.” she is beginning to make the connection that this war had left scars that will never be removed from the soldiers who fought (O’Brien PAGE). In “Camouflaging the Chimera,” the author writes about how the soldiers sat waiting for the perfect moment as to not get caught by the Viet-Cong and killed. Yusef Komunyakaa finishes this line with “till something almost broke inside us” which shows that the emotional toll on the soldiers was tremendous and could lead to irreversible damage of their minds (Komunyakaa). This long term scarring of the mind that is now called PTSD is recognized by the authors as a part of the fact that the government thought only of winning the war, instead of realizing that they had forced so many men to fight and deal with these problems in the

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