Feminism In The Things They Carried

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B@d B!tche$ in The Things They Carried
In the Vietnam jungle’s tall, gnarled trees and shadowy depths lurks a danger invisible to the naked eye. It is not the perilous creatures that traverse its grounds, nor even the soldiers with machine guns that pose the threat. In fact, the danger emanates from the absence of something—the absence of the female perspective. Tim O’Brien’s decides to expose the lost female perspective in his novel The Things They Carried. By focusing on the male point of view and devoting little on that of the female perspective, he fully demonstrates America’s gender stereotyping in war. Meanwhile, just as in the jungle, women are lost within the throng of the patriarchal construction of American society. While deployed men indeed face the complex fear of …show more content…

The deviated depiction of female protagonists from normalized gender binaries in The Things They Carried solidifies the masculine domination of war, and also uproots any possibility of male acceptance of the women that dare to test the masculine protocol casted on America by its own soldiers.
O’Brien is unique for his ability to offer a perspective of someone who is not just a survivor of the Vietnam War, but also a man that is thriving in America’s strict societal construction of forced masculinity. The men deployed to Vietnam, including O’Brien, lived in fear of banishment from a constructed hierarchy of masculinity as opposed to actually living in fear of their lives. American society in the 1970’s “polarized gender, reinforced binaries and stereotypes and privileged men” (Vanderwees 191). Society creates the image of a modern American male using stereotypes of strength, fitness and readiness to defend their country to define what “masculine” means. Any male outside of this strict definition of masculinity is either considered weak and

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