The Vietnam War occurred between 1959 and 1975. "It seems that anyone who survived in Vietnam thinks this is personal and cumbersome" (Mason 67). The last two generations understand this war and is more visible than the others. This particular war involves not only posttraumatic stress disorder, but also severe depression often associated with posttraumatic stress disorder as well as several depressions including drug abuse, ADHD, sleep disorders and dual onset Of well-documented side effects. I am very confused.
In the novel "In the Country", Bobbie Ann Mason wrote that a young woman and her uncle are trying to heal the wound caused by the Vietnam War. In the summer of 1984, young woman Sam Hughes and her uncle Emmet Smith visited Washington, DC. Their destination is probably Vietnam War Memorial, or Wall Street, which is one of the most dramatic monuments in the country. Some people devotedly arrive at the walls, others need to find an answer with confidence, others may endanger the latter.
Novelist Barbian An Mason believes that by touching the wall you can connect between the living and the dead. Rickberg, a Vietnamese war scholar (and veteran), concluded that this process moved Vietnam away from the country, but positioned the war as "... family life experience and historical fact." For veterans of the Vietnam War the monument broke through the psychoanalyst Shatan called "affected sorrow" and created an opportunity to mourn the lost comrades. The army does not encourage sorrow; the battle requires a soldier to keep fighting. Mourning was first arrested and then changed to "revenge of the ceremony" to afflict the enemy. The photo of former soldier who was crying became one of the most common representatives of the monument and one of the most common representatives of the Vietnam War.
Bobbie Ann Mason 's earliest novel was published by New Yorker in the 1980' s. Her work "Shiloh and Other Stories" was awarded the PEN Hemingway Award in the first novel and was nominated for multiple awards. The title story and her Vietnamese novel "In Country" are widely taught in the classroom and are the basis of Norman Jewison, Bruce Willis and Emily Lloyd's movies. Mason's memoir "Aoizumi" is the finalist of the Pulitzer Prize.