What Every Person Should Know About War Paperback – June 9, 2003 by Chris Hedges

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[192 Pages]

PUB:June 09, 2003

$9.48

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Author: Hedges Chris

Brand: Free Press

Edition: 1st Free Press Trade Paperback Ed

Features:

  • ISBN13: 9780743255127
  • Condition: New
  • Notes: BRAND NEW FROM PUBLISHER! 100% Satisfaction Guarantee. Tracking provided on most orders. Buy with Confidence! Millions of books sold!

Package Dimensions: 12x201x286

Number Of Pages: 192

Release Date: 09-06-2003

Details: Product Description
Acclaimed
New York Times journalist and author Chris Hedges offers a critical — and fascinating — lesson in the dangerous realities of our age: a stark look at the effects of war on combatants. Utterly lacking in rhetoric or dogma, this manual relies instead on bare fact, frank description, and a spare question-and-answer format. Hedges allows U.S. military documentation of the brutalizing physical and psychological consequences of combat to speak for itself.

Hedges poses dozens of questions that young soldiers might ask about combat, and then answers them by quoting from medical and psychological studies.
• What are my chances of being wounded or killed if we go to war?
• What does it feel like to get shot?
• What do artillery shells do to you?
• What is the most painful way to get wounded?
• Will I be afraid?
• What could happen to me in a nuclear attack?
• What does it feel like to kill someone?
• Can I withstand torture?
• What are the long-term consequences of combat stress?
• What will happen to my body after I die?

This profound and devastating portrayal of the horrors to which we subject our armed forces stands as a ringing indictment of the glorification of war and the concealment of its barbarity.
From Publishers Weekly
“This book is a manual on war. There is no rhetoric. There are very few adjectives,” Hedges proclaims in his introduction to this graphic primer. Framed as a question-and-answer manual for GIs, not “every person,” the book gives perfunctory information about military social life, pay, housing and housekeeping (a “central latrine will be established for multiple camps”). But the bulk of it is concerned with battlefield carnage, madness and pathos. A gristly chapter on “Weapons and Wounds” details the bodily effects of artillery shells, incendiaries and several types of bullets. Questions like “What does it feel like to kill someone?” (exhilaration, then remorse) and sections on post-traumatic stress disorder and flashbacks probe the psychic wounds of war. A chapter on “Dying” covers topics like “Will I be frozen in the position in which I die?” (“You can be straightened out after rigor mortis has set”) and “What will my last words be?” (“Many call for their mothers”). War correspondent Hedges, author of War is a Force That Gives Us Meaning (whose introductory paragraphs look a lot like their counterparts in this volume), presents this anxiety-provoking information as a grimly factual account of the true face of war-culled from “medical, psychological, and military studies”-that America shies away from in favor of sanitized myths of glory and heroism. He fails to note that depictions of gore, mayhem, psychological trauma and flashbacks have become staples of Hollywood’s treatment of war even as such experiences have become less common in America’s high-tech, casualty-averse military. Americans, soldiers and civilians both, could use a clear-eyed analysis of modern warfare, but this limited treatment doesn’t yet provide one.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.
About the Author
Chris Hedges is a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist who was a foreign correspondent and bureau chief in the Middle East and the Balkans for fifteen years for
The New York Times. He previously worked overseas for
The Dallas Morning News,
The Christian Science Monitor, and NPR. He is host of the Emmy Award­–nominated RT America show
On Contact. Hedges, who holds a Master of Divinity from Harvard University, is the author of numerous books and was a National Book Critics Circle finalist for
War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning. He has taught at Columbia University, New York University, Princeton University, and the University of Toronto. He has taught college credit courses through Rutgers University since 2013 in the New Jersey prison system.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Chapter 1: War 101

What is a war?

War is

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