Fr. 27.90

Fighting Sleep - The War for the Mind and the Us Military

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Franny Nudelman Klappentext On 21 April, 1971, hundreds of Vietnam veterans fell asleep on the National Mall, having fought the courts for the right to sleep in public as part of their week-long demonstration. When the Supreme Court denied their petition, veterans decided to break the law and turned sleep into a form of direct action.During and after WWII, military psychiatrists used sleep therapies to treat an epidemic of traumatised soldiers who suffered from "combat fatigue." Inducing deep and twilight sleep in clinical settings, they studied the effects of war violence on the mind and developed the techniques of brainwashing that would weaponise both memory and sleep. In the Vietnam era, radical veterans reclaimed the authority to interpret their own traumatic symptoms--nightmares, flashbacks, insomnia--and pioneered new methods of protest.In Sleeping Soldiers , Franny Nudelman recounts the struggle over sleep in the decades following WWII, arguing that the sleep of soldiers was instrumental to the development of military science, professional psychiatry, and anti-war activism. Traversing the fields of military and mainstream psychiatry, popular and institutional film, documentary sound technology, brain warfare, and postwar social movements, she demonstrates that sleep, far from passive, empty, or null, is a site of contention and a source of political agency. Zusammenfassung How the military used sleep as a weapon-and how soldiers fought back

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Praise for John Brown's Body: Slavery, Violence, and the Culture of War:

"John Brown's Body explains the enormous role of Brown's martyrdom in the visual and literary rhetoric of the Civil War" Adam Gopnik The New Yorker

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