Image for In the neighborhood of zero  : a World War II memoir

In the neighborhood of zero : a World War II memoir

See all formats and editions

Like so many soldiers of his generation, William V.

Spanos was not much more than a boy when he went off to fight in World War II.

In the chaos of his first battle, what would later become legendary as the Battle of the Bulge, he was separated from his antitank gun crew and taken prisoner in the Ardennes forest.

Along with a procession of other prisoners of war, he was marched and conveyed by freight train to Dresden.

Surviving the brutal conditions of the labor camps and the Allies’ devastating firebombing of the city, he escaped as the losing German army retreated.

For Spanos, this was never a “war story.” It was the singular, irreducible, unnameable, dreadful experience of war.

In the face of the American myth of the greatest generation, this renowned literary scholar looks back at that time and crafts a dissident, dissonant remembrance of the “just war.” Retrieving the singularity of the experience of war from the grip of official American cultural memory, Spanos recaptures something of the boy’s life that he lost.

His book is an attempt to rescue some semblance of his awakened being—and that of the multitude of young men who fought—from the oblivion to which they have been relegated under the banalizing memorialization of the “sacrifices of our greatest generation.”

Read More
Available
£20.79 Save 20.00%
RRP £25.99
Add Line Customisation
Usually dispatched within 2 weeks
Add to List
Product Details
University of Nebraska Press
0803226810 / 9780803226814
Hardback
01/04/2010
United States
English
224 p. : ill.
22 cm