Thursday, May 16, 2019

Norman Morrison and The Things They Carried

state of struggle has such a violent nature that it has affected many individuals in many different ways. The or so obvious of these is through the lives of the soldiers who experience it first-hand. However, even those who simply follow its progress and who oblige empathy for those in the awaken of such mass slaughter are affected by the event. Because of the bedevilness in war and the resulting mental and emotional set ups of this experience on such war-ravaged men, many writers have tried to tackle the subject. Norman Morrison and The Things They Carried are two literary pieces that have reflected the gravity of warfare and its impact on men who have struggled with its violence.Tim OBrien and Adrian Mitchell wrote pieces that resounded with their views on war. Both employed the use of the lives of their characters to get a point across to their lectors. contend is terrible. Its effects echo on in an individuals life and the images of the terror of war is forever and a daytime implanted in the lives of those who survive it. He was a slim, dead, almost dainty young man of closely twenty. He lay with one leg bent beneath him, his jaw in his throat, his face neither expressive nor inexpressive. One eye was shut. The other was a star-shaped hole. (OBrien, 1998)The drive of twain pieces is to show the effect of the deaths of those considered to be the enemy on those involved in the war. War is not indiscriminate hate precisely indiscriminate killing and both writers condemn these violent acts through their words. OBrien (1998) shows this clearly through The piece of music I Killed while Mitchell (1997) does so through the life of a man, Norman Morrison, who fought the war every day in his heart, at home.The two works are very comprehensive in sharing with the reader the experience of the war and the experience of life after the war. Although the actions of these individuals are clearly a result of psychological disorders, Tim OBrien and Adrian Mitc hell give their audience a look into the mindsets of those who are actu ally experiencing these events. It is not a trip into the mind of disturbed individuals who have lost control of themselves but rather it is a clear view into the life of someone who has experienced darkness and terror and who cannot, for the life of him, resolve it with the solace and peace that he once knew. All that peace, man, it felt so good it languish. I want to hurt it back. (OBrien, 1998)Norman Morrison was a completely new aspect of the war that no one was prepared to see. Although the wars effects on the soldiers were already clear, its effects on those left at home was not. Yes, in that location were those actively voicing out their concerns approximately the events, denouncing the war and demanding a stop to the violence, but how far did it go? How far did their empathy for those involved in the war go? Mitchell (1997) answers this for us, He simply burned away his clothes, his passport, his pin k-tinted skin, be sick on a new skin of flame and became Vietnamese.Thus war became not only about those on foreign shores, not only about those holding the guns and the ammunitions. It became something more palpable. It became about everyone who was part of the countries at war. It became about the victims in the country where the war was happening and about those from the opposite country who felt not only for their own soldiers but also for the innocent victims.In conclusion, it can be said that both literary pieces spoke of war. Both presented it through the lives of individuals who were involved in the war. This involvement was broad and included all of those who empathized with the events involved in war and those whose lives were directly affected by the violence. The tragic deaths of those in the path of the savage war were the tipping point that drove many individuals to the brink.ReferencesOBrien, T. (1998). The things they carried. New York Broadway BooksMitchell, A. (19 97) Norman Morrison. In Out Loud. capital of the United Kingdom W.H. Allen Publishers

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