A new way to "interrogate the project of military history" . . .
Let's revisit, say,
Russell F. Weigley, The American Way of War
Here are 5 means by which you might destabilize, decenter, deconstruct, or otherwise devalue that book:
1.
Identity and Community in The American Way of War: Russell F. Weigley Defamiliarizing Materialist Mythos
2.
Russell F. Weigley Alienating Representation: The American Way of War and the (Author)ity of Breath
3.
Russell F. Weigley, The American Way of War, and The Invader: Visioning Savage Darkness
4.
Encoding, Challenging, Transforming: Darkness in Russell F. Weigley and the Theoretical Politics of Seduction in The American Way of War
5.
Pathologizing the Objectified Tyranny in Russell F. Weigley: The American Way of War and Fragmentation
Er, my bad. That generator is just hilarious. About a month ago I walked through the English department halls on an unrelated matter and i'll be damned if some of those prose thickets intended here as a joke weren't there, for books written 200 ago, no less.
ReplyDeleteJaron
I'll see your Weigley and raise you one Barnett. Check this out:
ReplyDeleteEthos and Homosociality in The Pentegon's New Map: Thomas Barnett Demarking Unitary Mythos
Heteronormative Madness and the Spirit of Colonial Murder in Thomas Barnett's The Pentegon's New Map
Dismembering Corporeality: Phallic Textuality in Thomas Barnett's The Pentegon's New Map
Merging Assimilation: Emergent Fuzziness in Thomas Barnett's The Pentegon's New Map
Thomas Barnett, The Pentegon's New Map, and The Proletariat: Mourning Dialogic Autobiography
W. M. Beasley
wmbeasle@olemiss.edu