User:Chelsey.brantley/sandbox: Difference between revisions

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novel to effect change and the opportunity he had to shape readers’ understanding
novel to effect change and the opportunity he had to shape readers’ understanding
of what it meant to protest the war in Vietnam.
of what it meant to protest the war in Vietnam.
The political divide was so great in America in the late 1960s that Mailer may have felt obliged to explain one faction to another, to use as a didactic
tool; he was teaching about a counterculture, from which many Americans
were insulated. Scott MacFarlane measures the social turmoil of the times “at a level unseen since the Civil War. The book reading public was clamoring for insight into what was happening on the streets of America."{{sfn|MacFarlane|2007|p=133}} ''Armies'' was a new window into the anti-war movement. The mainstream
media kept Americans in the dark about the anti-war movement. Readers
were witness to Mailer’s own perspective of the counterculture which was not always exhortative: “It was the children in whom Mailer had some hope, a gloomy hope. These mad middle-class children with their lobotomies from
sin, their nihilistic embezzlement of all middle-class moral funds, their innocence,
their lust for apocalypse, their unbelievable indifference to waste."{{sfn|Mailer|1959|p=44}} Mailer does not form saints out of the anti-war camp, and
one could not accuse Mailer of being an outright defender of the counterculture.
But through his intimate sketches of the activists and his own experience
as a fellow marcher,we do see images of greatness, of self-sacrifice and {{pg|484|485}}


===Citations===
===Citations===