🎉 1/2 off all E-Books for Registering an account today! USE PROMO: 50%offregister
Sale!

World War I, Mass Death, and the Birth of the Modern US Soldier

Original price was: $49.00.Current price is: $36.75.

Quick Checkout

World War I, Mass Death, and the Birth of the Modern US Soldier: A Rhetorical History examines the United States government’s postwar ideological and rhetorical project in establishing permanent national military cemeteries abroad. Constructed throughout Europe where citizen-soldiers had fought and perished, and sacralized as American sites, these burial grounds simultaneously linked the nation’s war dead back to American soil and the national purpose rooted there, expressed the nation’s emerging prominent role on the world’s stage, and advanced the burgeoning icon of the “sacrificial, universal” US soldier. It draws upon untapped archival and historical materials from the WWI and interwar periods, as well as original on-site research, to show how the cemeteries came to display and advance the vision of the modern US soldier as “a global force for good.” Ultimately, within the visual display of overseas cemeteries we can detect the birth of “the modern US soldier”—a potent icon in which divergent emotions, memories, beliefs, and arguments of Americans and non-Americans have been expressed for a century.

Author

David W. Seitz

Book Series

Lexington Studies in Contemporary Rhetoric

Format

Ebook

ISBN

9781498546881

Language

English

Pages

692

Publication Date

06-19-2018

Publisher

Lexington Books

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Only logged in customers who have purchased this product may leave a review.

Scroll to Top