DIGIRENT - Parallels: The Soldier's Knowledge and the Oral History of Contemporary Warfare (Communication and Social Order)
Michael Madden
[PDF.gu49] DIGIRENT - Parallels: The Soldier's Knowledge and the Oral History of Contemporary Warfare (Communication and Social Order) Rating: 3.72 (645 Votes)
Parallels: The Soldier's Knowledge Michael Madden epub Parallels: The Soldier's Knowledge Michael Madden pdf download Parallels: The Soldier's Knowledge Michael Madden pdf file Parallels: The Soldier's Knowledge Michael Madden audiobook Parallels: The Soldier's Knowledge Michael Madden book review Parallels: The Soldier's Knowledge Michael Madden summary | #4674370 in Books | 1992-12-31 | Original language:English | PDF # 1 | 9.24 x.85 x6.28l,1.21 | File type: PDF | 250 pages||2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.| OUTSTANDING|By A Customer|This is the most powerful oral history book on the Vietnam experience I have ever read. These vets take you to the soul of their horror and grab you with the insanity of their current situation - it still eats at them every day.|From Library Journal|Bringing academic focus onto the experience of modern warfare generally produces a schism between the dispassion of the examiner and the passion of the combatant. Nevertheless, this work sheds light on the combat experience and its effect on
Parallels reclaims the experience of American and Soviet participants in the two longest and most devastating episodes of contemporary warfare: Vietnam and Afghanistan. The volume is constructed directly from the narratives and recollection of surviving veterans, and encapsulates the voiced "realities," both choral and discordantly individual, of what those participants have undergone and endured. In their very intensity and authenticity, these voices pose a challenge...
You can specify the type of files you want, for your gadget.Parallels: The Soldier's Knowledge and the Oral History of Contemporary Warfare (Communication and Social Order) | Michael Madden. Just read it with an open mind because none of us really know.