Portland Public Library

Battle green Vietnam, the 1971 march on Concord, Lexington, and Boston, Elise Lemire

Label
Battle green Vietnam, the 1971 march on Concord, Lexington, and Boston, Elise Lemire
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 165-206) and index
Illustrations
mapsillustrations
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Battle green Vietnam
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
1199328809
Responsibility statement
Elise Lemire
Sub title
the 1971 march on Concord, Lexington, and Boston
Summary
"Battle Green Vietnam: The 1971 March on Concord, Lexington, and Boston tells the story of how America's antiwar Vietnam veterans finally grabbed and held the national spotlight by simultaneously mobilizing two powerful tools: place and performance. The aim of the book is to reveal the power of place and performance in oppositional politics, the traditional function of Revolutionary War battlefield memorialization in American life, and the role of Vietnam veterans both in the antiwar movement and in changing American memorialization practices. Beginning on the Friday morning of May 28, 1971, when the protest launched, and ending on the late Monday afternoon of its closing on May 31, 1971, each of the book's six chapters focuses on a veteran, his reasons for joining the military, his experience in Southeast Asia, his role in the 1971 march, and what the march meant to him. Each chapter also explores a part of the memorialized landscape stretching from Concord to Boston"--, Provided by publisherIn the spring of 1971, the largest mass arrest in Massachusetts history unfolded at a site nationally celebrated as the birthplace of freedom and democracy. With peace efforts at a standstill, the New England chapter of Vietnam Veterans Against the War had organized an event to rouse public support for their cause. Over the course of the long Memorial Day weekend, a band of more than two hundred young, fatigue-clad veterans sounded the alarm for peace and patriotism by marching—in reverse—the path Paul Revere had taken two centuries earlier when he called on the American colonists to rise against their British oppressors. Enacting the parts of colonial militiamen, the veterans set off in patrol formation along the famed Battle Road, a route calculated to take them past Concord's Old North Bridge, onto Lexington's Battle Green, and up to Bunker Hill. Determined to reanimate the patriotic sentiments expressed by the area's many Revolutionary War memorials, they revealed how far the nation had veered from its ideals by staging reenactments of the brutal atrocities they had witnessed and perpetrated in the name of freedom on the other side of the world. "With an ironic twist," the fliers they distributed explained, "our presence in Indochina as viewed by a native of an occupied village easily coincides with the British army in America." To the selectmen of the town of Lexington who ordered their mass arrest, the veterans were defiling spaces sacred to the nation's Revolutionary past; to the hundreds of bystanders who fed, sheltered, and committed civil disobedience with them, they were an inspiration. Elise Lemire tells this extraordinary story from the perspective of six men who played central roles in the events of May 1971. Based on more than one hundred interviews with participants and accompanied by nearly forty photographs and maps, Battle Green Vietnam demonstrates the power of mobilizing history, myth, and memorials to effect revolutionary change
Table Of Contents
Introduction: The power of place and performance -- Paul Revere's ride -- Minute Men statues -- Memorial war obelisks -- Battle roads and fields -- Historical reenactment -- Memorial Day -- Epilogue: Memorializing the Vietnam War
Content
Mapped to