- September 1, 2004 through January 31, 2005
- Related Links:
Southwestern Writers Collection Exhibit
& Panel
Examine Vietnam from a Texas Point of View
TEXAS STATE UNIVERSITY-SAN MARCOS "Why are we
in Vietnam?" Americans asked that question during the 1960s
with increasing urgency. With LBJ in the White House, the answers
for some seemed to point towards Texas. In the years since, many
of the state's best writers have wrestled over issues the war
raised, and responses from their points of view can be seen in
a thought-provoking new exhibit at Texas State's Southwestern
Writers Collection, Vietnam from a Texas POV, accompanied
by a panel discussion on Veterans' Day.
The first Texan president, Lyndon B. Johnson, was inextricably
linked to Vietnam, and he often drew on "Alamo" analogies
to help make sense of the war. Norman Mailer's 1967 novel, Why
are we in Vietnam?, famously never even mentions Vietnam
until the story's final page. Mailer's tale of violence-prone
Texas hunters proposes that America's inherent love of aggression,
magnified by Texan attitudes, is responsible for the war.
Texans were also victims of the war: 3,415 of the state's
servicemen died in Southeast Asia. Countless others-whether fighting
abroad, protesting at home, or concerned about loved ones-found
their lives changed forever. The Vietnam War and its aftershocks
helped define an entire generation of Texans. Not surprisingly,
many of the state's best writers, filmmakers, and musicians have
focused their artistic efforts on the war and its legacies.
Vietnam from a Texas POV tells their stories with war
narratives and memoirs, portraits from the home front, and legacies
of the conflict-including the arrival of numerous Vietnamese
refugees to Texas-the "Boat People." The exhibit showcases
manuscripts, photographs, artifacts, uniforms, and memorabilia-all
drawn from the rich archives at the Southwestern Writers Collection.
Featured writers include South Texas native and world-class detective
novelist James Crumley, whose debut novel, One to Count Cadence
(1969), is considered a modern classic of war literature.
William Broyles, Jr., a Marine Lieutenant in Vietnam, later
became the founding editor of Texas Monthly and editor-in-chief
of Newsweek. Broyles was among the very first American
veterans to return to Vietnam in the early 1980s, and his memoir
of the Vietnam experience, reconciled in part by his return visit,
was published in 1986 as Brothers in Arms: A Journey from
War to Peace. (It was reprinted in 1996 by University of
Texas Press as part of the Southwestern Writers Collection Book
Series.) In the late 1980s, Broyles co-created the Emmy Award-winning
television series China Beach, which called attention
to the significant roles women played in Vietnam.
Sarah Bird's acclaimed novel The Yokota Officers Club,
is set during the Vietnam War and features an anti-war military
brat stationed overseas with her family. Bird herself protested
the Vietnam War as a college student in the late 1960s, forming
a chapter of "Damsels in Dissent" at the University
of New Mexico. Bird's manuscript material from The Yokota
Officers Club is on exhibit, as well as memorabilia from
the war years.
Texas writer and Korean War veteran Robert Flynn journeyed
to Vietnam in 1970 as a college professor-turned-war correspondent.
Flynn's reporting from the field, documented in A Personal
War in Vietnam (1989), is a remarkably clear-eyed account
that brings the war into bold relief. Flynn's mid-life experience
in Vietnam also formed the basis of his 1994 novel, The Last
Klick.
Two of Texas State's own are also featured in the exhibit:
Mark Busby, Director of the Southwest Regional Humanities Center,
captured his experience in Officer Candidate School at the height
of the conflict in his novel Fort Benning Blues (2001);
also included is Texas State MFA candidate Michael W. Rodriguez,
whose 1998 collection of stories, Humidity Moon, surveys
the turbulent emotional life of a Marine "grunt" in
Vietnam during the mid-1960s.
Numerous other accounts by Texans are also on display: works
by Roy Benavidez (Medal of Honor), Al Dewlen (Next
of Kin), Mary Gardner (Boat People), John P. McAfee
(Slow Walk in a Sad Rain), Charlie McDade (The Gulf),
Walter McDonald (A Band of Brothers: Stories from Vietnam),
James N. Rowe (Five Years to Freedom)-and many more-as
well as articles from the Texas Monthly Archives at the
Southwestern Writers Collection.
Vietnam from a Texas POV also contains sound portraits
from noted Texas musician Terry Allen. His 1983 recording, "Amerasia,"
addresses Vietnam's legacy by combining music from Southeast
Asia with Allen's own Texas-based "Panhandle Mystery Band."
On November 11, 2004-Veterans' Day-the Southwestern
Writers Collection presents some of the exhibit's featured writers
in a panel discussion of the Vietnam experience. Participants
will include Sarah Bird, Robert Flynn and Michael W. Rodriguez,
along with Mark Busby, author and Director of Texas State's Southwest
Regional Humanities Center. Busby will moderate the forum. Hors
d'oeuvre reception from 6:00 to 7:00 pm. Panel discussion from
7:00 to 8:30 pm. Book signing with the panelists from 8:30 to
9:30 pm. (Books will be sold at the event courtesy of the
University Bookstore.) Admission is FREE and open to the public.
The exhibit, designed and created by Steve Davis, Assistant
Curator of the Southwestern Writers Collection, with support
from Library Assistant Mary Garcia, opens September 1, 2004 and
will be on display through January 31, 2005.
The Southwestern Writers Collection is on the seventh floor
of the Alkek Library at Texas State University-San Marcos.
Open Mon/Tue/Fri 8 am to 5 pm; Wed/Thu 8 am to 7 pm; Sat 9 am
to 5 pm; Sun 2 to 6 pm (please call ahead to verify; closed breaks
and holidays). 512-245-2313. Admission is FREE. www.swwc.txstate.edu.
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THE SOUTHWESTERN WRITERS COLLECTION, in the Albert B. Alkek
Library at Texas State University-San Marcos, was founded in
1986 and has since become a distinguished and steadily growing
archive charged with preserving, exhibiting, and providing access
to the papers and artifacts of principal writers, filmmakers,
songwriters and musicians of the Southwest. Its resources attest
to the tremendous diversity of creative expression among southwestern
artists and contribute to an inspiring research environment within
which students and others may discover how the unique conditions
and character of the region have shaped its people and their
cultural arts. Curator, Connie Todd. Assistant Curator, Steve
Davis. www.swwc.txstate.edu
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TEXAS STATE UNIVERSITY-SAN MARCOS, established 1899,
is a member of the Texas State University System.
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