Militarized Freedoms

L. Bui
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Abstract

This chapter explores stories of Vietnamese Americans who came of age after the Vietnam War and currently serve in the U.S. armed forces during the War on Terror in countries like Afghanistan and Iraq. These soldiers not only wanted to give back to their adopted country for their free lives as refugees fleeing the war but also to make up for America’s loss of Vietnam as well as the defeat of South Vietnam. From the oral histories, the chapter moves on to a major published literary memoir from U.S. Marine Quang X. Pham. Pham, a well-known public figure, talks about his confused life through losing his father, a South Vietnamese former pilot. From these oral and written texts, the chapter analyzes the thoughts of these “children of war” on wide-ranging issues such as migration, nation, family, and citizenship through the concept of “militarized freedom”—defined for these professionals as the sense of freedom (both political and personal) as shaped through their experiences and trauma with militarism. The Vietnamese American soldier encounters a moral dilemma that moves beyond a “Vietnam Syndrome,” an “American Syndrome,” where their professional obligations to American nation-building projects pulsate through their personal status as the living embodiment and physical reminders of America’s loss in South Vietnam.
军事化的自由
这一章探讨了越南战争后成年的越南裔美国人的故事,他们目前在阿富汗和伊拉克等国家的反恐战争期间在美国武装部队服役。这些士兵不仅想以逃离战争的难民的身份回馈他们的祖国,而且想弥补美国在越南的损失以及南越的失败。从口述历史开始,本章转向美国海军陆战队员pang X. Pham出版的一部重要文学回忆录。范是一位著名的公众人物,他讲述了他失去父亲的困惑生活,他的父亲是一名南越前飞行员。从这些口头和书面文本中,本章通过“军事化自由”的概念分析了这些“战争儿童”在移民、国家、家庭和公民身份等广泛问题上的想法——对这些专业人士来说,这一概念定义为通过他们的经历和军国主义的创伤而形成的自由感(政治和个人的)。越南裔美国士兵遇到了一种道德困境,这种困境超越了“越南综合症”,一种“美国综合症”,他们对美国国家建设项目的职业义务,通过他们作为美国在南越损失的活生生的化身和物理提醒的个人身份而跳动。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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