The Things They Carried 'By Tim O' Brien: An Analysis

1640 Words4 Pages

Tim O’Brien’s The Things They Carried: An Annotated Bibliography Research Question: What are common themes in O’Brien’s short story? Chen, Tina. "`Unraveling The Deeper Meaning': Exile And The Embodied Poetics Of Displacement In Tim O'Brien's." Contemporary Literature 39.1 (1998): 77. Academic Search Premier. Web. 17 July 2014. Tina Chen’s critical essay provides information on how returning soldiers aren’t able to connect to society and the theme of alienation and displacement that O’Brien discussed in his stories. To explain, soldiers returning from war feel alienated because they cannot come to terms with what they saw and what they did in battle. Next, Chen discusses how O’Brien talks about soldiers reminiscing about home instead of focusing in the field and how, when something bad happens, it is because they weren’t focused on the field. Finally, when soldiers returned home they felt alienated from the country and …show more content…

To explain, in trauma theory, the ideas of truth and fact are more difficult because veterans find the fiction books more appropriate than non-fiction. For example, when Tim O’Brien writes his novels as fiction, it is because he has suffered traumatic experience and writes about events with a strong link to his past but in a fiction form. O’Brien also explains that in order to understand you must have experience yourself. Due to the trauma theory being able to put the experiences of war into words can help heal returning soldiers. Lahti believes this is why O’Brien’s writing is helping him heal from his own experiences. Lahti states that not only are solders carrying their weapons and dog tags but they are also carrying the trauma of the experiences and actions of what they have done during battle. The theme is soldiers trying to cope with their experiences, which is also discussed throughout O’Brien’s

Open Document