Patriotism In The Things They Carried By Tim O Brien

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“I saw courage both in the Vietnam War and in the struggle to stop it. I learned that patriotism includes protest, not just military service.” (Kerry) Through the novel The Things They Carried, Tim O’Brien writes about his life and surrounding the vietnam war. He writes nonlinear stories about events that changed his life including death in order to tell and make his readers feel what he felt back in vietnam. The purpose of his writing is deep and intriguing to read. The effective author, Tim O’Brien, uses themes storytelling/’memories and shame/guilt to explain to readers the true meaning of war.

By giving the narrator his own name and naming the rest of his characters different after the men he actually fought with in the Vietnam War, …show more content…

Statements such as “This is true,” starts off “How to Tell a True War Story,” does not actually say that the things O’Brien writes about actually happened.It is more like, they indicate that the stylistic and thematic content of the story is more accurate to the experience that the soldiers had in the war. This truth is often ugly, in different to the ideas of glory and heroism thought with wars before Vietnam. In O’Brien’s “true” war story, Rat Kiley writes to Lemon’s sister, and when she never responds to him, he calls her a “dumb cooze,” only adding to the truthess and emotion of the story. O’Brien’s declaration that the truest part of this story is that it contains no moral sense, the idea that the purpose of stories is to relate the truth of experience and connect, not to make false emotions in their …show more content…

His story “On the Rainy River” explains his moral thoughts after receiving his draft notice. He does not want to fight in a war he believes is unjust, but he also does not want to be thought a coward by his friends and family. What keeps O’Brien from fleeing into Canada is not patriotism or dedication to his country’s cause but concern over what his family and community will think of him if he does not fight in a war to support his country. This experience is symbolic of the conflict, throughout The Things They Carried, between the expectations of a group of people important to a character and that character’s assumptions about a certain

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