Unconventional Warriors: The Fantasy of the American Resistance Fighter in Television and Film
By (Author) Matthew B. Hill
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
21st February 2018
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Films, cinema
Irregular or guerrilla forces and warfare
791.4365810973
Hardback
248
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
595g
Tracing the "American Guerrilla" narrative through more than one hundred years of film and television, this book shows how the conventions and politics of this narrative influence Americans to see themselves as warriors, both on screen and in history. American guerrillas fight small-scale battles that, despite their implications for large-scale American victories, often go untold. This book evaluates those stories to illumine the ways in which film and television have created, reinforced, and circulated an "American Guerrilla" fantasya mythic narrative in which Americans, despite having the most powerful military in history, are presented as underdog resistance fighters against an overwhelming and superior occupying evil. Unconventional Warriors: The Fantasy of the American Resistance Fighter in Television and Film explains that this fantasy has occupied the center of numerous war films and in turn shaped the way in which Americans see those wars and themselves. Informed by the author's expertise on war in contemporary literature and popular culture, this book begins with an introduction that outlines the basics of the "American Guerrilla" narrative and identifies it as a recurring theme in American war films. Subsequent chapters cover one hundred years of American "guerrillas" in film and television. The book concludes with a chapter on science fiction narratives, illustrating how the conventions and politics of these stories shape even the representation of wholly fictional, imagined wars on screen.
Hill is at his best when analyzing works from a range of mutually complementary perspectives. . . . Recommended. * Choice *
Matthew B. Hill, PhD, is associate professor of English in the Humanities Department at Coppin State University, in Baltimore, MD.