User:Chelsey.brantley/sandbox: Difference between revisions

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Through Mailer’s dual role as a demonstrator and narrator, readers are provided
Through Mailer’s dual role as a demonstrator and narrator, readers are provided
a rich witness to the many obstacles that were set before marchers in the form of a biased media and government officials opposed to the peace
a rich witness to the many obstacles that were set before marchers in the form of a biased media and government officials opposed to the peace
movement, including the military and police whose physical abuse is featured in the novel.  
movement, including the military and police whose physical abuse is featured in the novel.
 
''Armies'' is also concerned with a sweeping view of American culture ''vis-à-vis'' the march, for this is a “literary project . . . radically committed to a
rendering of the American reality”,{{sfn|Scott|1973|p=18}} and ''Armies'' becomes Mailer’s
attempt to expand upon the march’s implications for the national character.
When ''Armies'' was published, the country was divided over the war in Vietnam; according to a 1967 Gallup poll, when asked whether “the U.S. made a mistake sending troops to Vietnam” forty-six percent said yes while almost an equal amount, forty-four percent, answered no.{{sfn|Gallup|1972|p=2087}} Mailer addresses
the division over the war and also the disparaging of anti-war