New Book "Hanoi Jane: War, Sex, and Fantasies of Betrayal"
http://janefonda.com/new-book-hanoi-jane-war-sex-and-fantasies-of-betrayal/
Jan 13.10
Hanoi Jane
War, Sex, and Fantasies of Betrayal
By Jerry Lembcke
A provocative analysis of how and why Jane Fonda the person became
Hanoi Jane the myth
From Aristophanes' Lysistrata to the notorious Mata Hari and the
legendary Tokyo Rose, stories of female betrayal during wartime have
recurred throughout human history. The myth of Hanoi Jane, Jerry
Lembcke argues, is simply the latest variation on this enduring
theme. Like most of the iconic femmes fatales who came before, it is
based on a real person, Jane Fonda. And also like its predecessors,
it combines traces of fact with heavy doses of fiction to create a
potent symbol of feminine perfidypart erotic warrior-woman
Barbarella, part savvy antiwar activist, and part powerful entrepreneur.
Hanoi Jane, the book, deconstructs Hanoi Jane, the myth, to locate
its origins in the need of Americans to explain defeat in Vietnam
through fantasies of home-front betrayal and the emasculation of the
national will-to-war. Lembcke shows that the expression "Hanoi Jane"
did not reach the eyes and ears of most Americans until five or six
years after the end of the war in Vietnam. By then, anxieties about
America's declining global status and deteriorating economy were
fueling a populist reaction that pointed to the loss of the war as
the taproot of those problems. Blaming the antiwar movement for
undermining the military's resolve, many found in the imaginary Hanoi
Jane the personification of their stab-in-the- back theories.
Ground zero of the myth was the city of Hanoi itself, which Jane
Fonda had visited as a peace activist in July 1972. Rumors
surrounding Fonda's visits with
U.S. POWs and radio broadcasts to troops combined to conjure
allegations of treason that had cost American lives. That such tales
were more imagined than real did not prevent them from insinuating
themselves into public memory, where they have continued to infect
American politics and culture.
Hanoi Jane is a book about the making of Hanoi Jane by those who saw
a formidable threat in the Jane Fonda who supported soldiers and
veterans opposed to the war they fought, in the postcolonial struggle
of the Vietnamese people to make their own future, and in the
movements of women everywhere for gender equality.
"This is not a narrowly focused effort to compare the 'real' Jane
Fonda to the image of 'Hanoi Jane.' Rather, Lembcke shows how Fonda's
demonization played an important part in a powerful right-wing
campaign to attribute American defeat in Vietnam to left-wing
scapegoats and to reconstitute U.S. power as well as the ideal of
aggressive masculinity." Christian G. Appy, author of Patriots: The
Vietnam War Remembered from All Sides "Pulsing with brilliant
insights and invaluable scholarship, Hanoi Jane is much more than a
biography of a single myth. It is an exploration of some of the
tangled cultural, psychological, and historical strands that
constitute American memory of the Vietnam War, memory with profound
influence on American culture and behavior in the last quarter of the
twentieth century and the first decade of the twenty-first." H.
Bruce Franklin, author of Vietnam and Other American Fantasies
Jerry Lembcke is professor of sociology at The College of the Holy
Cross and author of The Spitting Image: Myth, Memory, and the Legacy
of Vietnam.
American Studies / Cultural Studies
224 pp. $22.95 paper ISBN 978-1-55849-815-0
$80.00 cloth, ISBN 978-1-55849-814-3 June 2010
.
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