An Inside Look At A Soldier's Life in the Vietnam War

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The emotional stress that most soldiers carry with them during times of war is due to their inexperience and age. The majority of men who fought in the Vietnam war ranged from ages early as eighteen to their early twenties. Among these men, were sons, spouses, friends, boyfriends, and students, who could not understand the thought of war, killing, or contend with their friends’ unexpected deaths. From the beginning of the story, O’Brien the author of “The Things They Carried” uses specific details and illustrations to show readers what the experience was like for the men during the Vietnam war. Among the many things that the men carry were guilt, fear, grief, and stress. Throughout the story O’Brien emphasizes the dreadful events that these men carry with them by incorporating the use of multiple themes such as: the emotional and physical burdens, fear, psychological well being and the use of motifs and symbols such as death in handling difficult situations.

Tim O’Brien, who is the author and the narrator describes the “things” that all the men of the platoon bear and carry. In the title The Things They Carried, the word “things” symbolizes what each men carried with them throughout the war both literally and figuratively. Although many of the soldiers carry physical objects, they also all carry emotional objects as well such as fear, terror, love, death, and longing. Throughout the story each character’s physical burden emphasizes their emotional burden. The many different “things” each person carried also depended on many other factors as well, including their personal needs, desire, and emotional well-being. O’Brien illustrates the physical things that each men carried by describing and detailing each object to create a ment...

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...s he relates. In most cases O’Brien bears himself up as representation for the general statements he makes about the war. By reading The Things They Carried, O’Brien is indeed our guide through the unexplainable trepidation of the war and the prime example of how severe situations can turn a sensible intelligent man into a soldier who acts irrationally for no reasonable explanation. Occasionally, O’Brien grows dim and lets another character or a third person tell the story. This technique provide a human aspect to the stories’ themes and gives us the opportunity to understand the events that men experience during war from several different perspectives. O’Brien constructs a distinguished plot through his writing. Reading The Things They Carried is often similar to spending long-lasting time with an old veteran of the war, allowing his memories to come to him slowly.

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