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Shay works from an intriguing premise: that the study of the great
Homeric epic of war, The
Iliad, can illuminate our understanding of Vietnam, and vice versa.
Along the way, he compares the battlefield experiences of men like
Agamemnon and Patroclus with those of frontline grunts, analyzes the
berserker rage that overcame Achilles and so many American soldiers alike,
and considers the ways in which societies ancient and modern have
accounted for and dealt with post-traumatic stress disorder---a malady
only recently recognized in the medical literature, but well attested in
Homer's pages. The novelist Tim
O'Brien, who has written so affectingly about his experiences in
combat, calls Shay's book "one of the most original and most
important scholarly works to have emerged from the Vietnam war." He's
right.
From Booklist
, April 1, 1994
Psychiatrist Shay has learned from his own patients that, with
treatment, a Vietnam veteran can usually overcome horror, fear, and
grief--but not when "what's right" has been violated. Betrayal
by superiors in the field or, more likely, by officers or politicians in
comfortable surroundings is the one unforgivable action. Currently,
250,000 Vietnam veterans meet the accepted criteria for post-traumatic
stress disorder, so this is not a minor matter. Shay, who knows both his
Homer and his combat soldiers, has done a remarkable job of comparing and
contrasting the Greek soldiers before Troy and U.S. grunts in Vietnam.
Group loyalty and support were vital to individuals in both groups, while
the major differences involved grief work and the image of the enemy. Shay
also explores the concept, emotions, and actions of the berserker (of
which he takes Achilles as the model), and he discloses that one of his
major treatment goals is to make remembering possible. This is a
profoundly human book and a strong, realistic argument against modern
warfare. William Beatty
Copyright© 1994, American Library Association. All rights reserved
From Kirkus Reviews , March 15, 1994
In a brilliantly creative extended analogy, psychiatrist Shay (Tufts
Medical School) persuasively argues that the experiences and behavior of
traumatized Vietnam veterans echo those of Achilles in Homer's Iliad.
Shay's ``principal concern is to put before the public an understanding of
the specific nature of catastrophic war experiences'' that ``can ruin good
character.'' He follows the Iliad closely, showing how Achilles'
character, like those of modern veterans, gradually disintegrates under
the pressure of organized combat: Arbitrary command decisions (e.g., the
seizure by Agamemnon of a war prize voted Achilles by his fellow warriors
or the capricious assignment of a GI by a superior to hazardous duty)
betray the soldier's sense of fairness and fuel his incipient rage. In
combat, the soldier's social and moral horizon then shrinks to a small
group of trusted companions, like the Vietnam soldier's ``buddy'' or
Achilles' beloved friend Patroklos. Under the stress of combat, the
soldier's rage, grief, and sense of abandonment and disconnection
culminate in a ``berserk'' state in which he commits successive
atrocities. Using first-person accounts of Vietnam veterans, Shay compares
each aspect of Achilles' moral deterioration with the veterans' strikingly
similar experiences. The author expresses cautious hope that survivors of
severe trauma can recover to some degree (although many veterans' lives
seem permanently blighted by their Vietnam experiences). He makes some
recommendations for ameliorating the worst effects of severe combat
trauma; among these are the preservation of unit cohesion throughout the
combat experience (rather than, as in Vietnam, rotating individuals into
and out of units while engaged in combat) and reform of motivational
techniques used by officers in combat. A heart-rending look at the
permanent ruin war can wreak in any age. -- Copyright ©1994, Kirkus
Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Book Description
In this strikingly original and groundbreaking book, Dr. Shay examines
the psychological devastation of war by comparing the soldiers of Homer's Iliad
with Vietnam veterans suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder.
Although the Iliad was written twenty-seven centuries ago it has
much to teach about combat trauma, as do the more recent, compelling
voices and experiences of Vietnam vets.
Synopsis
Using vivid narratives of Vietnam veterans afflicted with
posttraumatic stress disorder, his own discoveries in treating these men,
and the profound poetic truths of the Iliad, Shay reveals the devastating
effects of catastrophic war experiences on the minds and spirits of
soldiers.
Synopsis
Dr. Shay has spent the past several years treating Vietnam-combat
veterans afflicted with post-traumatic stress disorder. He has come to see
an overwhelming and undeniable similarity to the experience of soldiers in
Homer's Iliad, including Achilles' shrinking moral and social world and
his feelings of betrayal and being "already dead."
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