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Events on the battlefields of the Pacific War were not only outgrowths of technology and tactical doctrine, but also the products of cultural myth and imagination. A neglected aspect of the history of the Marine Corps operation against Imperial Japan has been any close study of how the marines themselves shaped the landscape of the battlefields on which they created new institutional legends.
Marines projected ideas and assumptions about themselves and their enemy onto people, situations, and events throughout the war, and thereby gave life to formerly abstract ideas and molded their behavior to expectations.
Focusing specifically on the First Marine Division, this study draws on a broad range of approaches to its subject. The book begins with a look at the legacy of the Marine Corps on the eve of Pearl Harbor, and then turns to gender studies to shed light on the methods of "making" marines. At the heart of the book are close examinations of how three broad categories of myth and imagination directly affected the First Division's campaigns on Guadalcanal, Peleiu, and Okinawa.
The study concludes by considering what happened to the myths and images of the Pacific War in the Korean War, and how they have been preserved in American Society up to the present.
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Previews available in: English
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1
American Samurai: Myth and Imagination in the Conduct of Battle in the First Marine Division 1941-1951
July 25, 2002, Cambridge University Press
Paperback
in English
- New Ed edition
0521525926 9780521525923
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2
American samurai: myth, imagination and the conduct of battle in the First Marine Division, 1941-1951
2002, Cambridge University Press
in English
0521525926 9780521525923
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3
American samurai: myth, imagination, and the conduct of battle in the First Marine Division, 1941-1951
1994, Cambridge University Press
in English
0521441684 9780521441681
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Book Details
Edition Notes
Includes bibliographical references (p. 273-284) and index.
Based on the author's thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, 1990.
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