Research Draft
This
research draft paper is about combining my two theories on story telling
history and military. What my paper is
about is how soldiers have chosen different ways to tell their stories. I picked three wars for my research they are
World War One, Vietnam, and War on Terror. The reason behind the three is that
even with as dark as war is soldiers see the need to tell their story. After
WW1 soldiers would not wright books or really even talk about it due to what
they seen. There were some that would come forth and talk about it unfourtanly
today almost all of the last WW1 soldiers are no longer with us. With Vietnam
soldiers there were afraid to tell their story due to anti-war movements and
how they were treated when they came home. My father was one of those soldiers and
when he tells his story you can hear the sadness in his tone to tell his story.
Today’s soldiers want people to know
their stories of what they did. They are not trying to get the glory of telling
their story. What they want is for the
younger generations to see what war is like.
My
intent is to not only talk about the history side but also the personal side of
it. For the earlier generations we have lost so much living history that we
will never get back. With most of the WW1 veterans past away we will never be
able to hear their stories. With the more modern day wars we have the chance to
save those stories for the future generations. I named
my paper “Living History” for those who have served and are still telling their
story. Once those who are telling their
story’s lived in war and were part of a change in history from the trench
soldiers in WW1 to the government workers flying unman aircraft from home. They
all have a story to tell and once there gone so is their story.
Sources
On the Front Line: True World War I Stories [NOOK Book], by
Jon E. Lewis
World War One Short Stories ,by Bob Blaisdell (Editor)
Vietnam: The Necessary War: A Reinterpretation of America's
Most Disastrous Military Conflict, by
Michael Lind
Vietnam: A View From the Frontlines, by
Andrew Wiest
American Sniper: The Autobiography of the Most Lethal Sniper
in U.S. Military History, by Chris Kyle
No Easy Day: The Autobiography of a Navy Seal: The Firsthand
Account of the Mission That Killed Osama Bin Laden, by Mark Owen
Stories from
Dan Goodall
Mary Ransom
SFC Evens