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Lost in America by Colby Buzzell
Lost in America by Colby Buzzell












Lost in America by Colby Buzzell Lost in America by Colby Buzzell

If you are a member of an institution with an active account, you may be able to access content in one of the following ways: Get help with access Institutional accessĪccess to content on Oxford Academic is often provided through institutional subscriptions and purchases. These lines of sight, all targeting the spectacle of war, reveal the contemporary intersections among war, media, and agency. This can also be seen in the way that a noncombatant readership encounters Swofford’s and Buzzell’s representations of that experience. But since the 1990s the increasing accessibility of media such as video and digital texts has greatly affected soldiers' expectations of and reactions to combat. The second connection they had with the outside world came from movies viewed communally. Even in the Vietnam War, the main source of communication available to soldiers was through writing letters and the military could censor those. Both are compelling texts in part because they show the relationship between the contemporary experience of war and the changing technologies of representation. This chapter presents a reading of Jarhead by Anthony Swofford, a 2003 memoir of the Gulf War and My War: Killing Time in Iraq by Colby Buzzell, a 2005 memoir of the Iraq War.














Lost in America by Colby Buzzell