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                176   Chapter 8 ‘Race’, racism and representation

                      ‘bad’ Sergeant Barnes and who listens to Merle Haggard’s ‘Okie from Muskogee’ and
                      drinks  beer)  wants  to  fight  the  war  in  any  way  which  will  win  it.  We  are  asked  to
                      believe  that  this  was  the  essential  conflict  which  tore  America  apart  –  the  anti-war
                      movement, dissolved into a conflict on how best to fight and win the war. As Michael
                      Klein contends ‘the war is decontextualized, mystified as a tragic mistake, an existential
                      adventure, or a rite of passage through which the White American Hero discovers his
                      identity’ (1990: 10).
                         Although I have outlined three of the dominant narrative paradigms in Hollywood’s
                      Vietnam, I do not want to suggest that these were or are unproblematically consumed by
                      its American audiences (or any other audience). My claim is only that Hollywood pro-
                      duced a particular regime of truth. But film (like any other cultural text or practice) has
                      to be made to mean (see Chapter 10). To really discover the extent to which Hollywood’s
                      Vietnam has made its ‘truth’ tell requires a consideration of consumption. This will
                      take us beyond a focus on the meaning of a text, to a focus on the meanings that can
                      be made in the encounter between the discourses of the text and the discourses of
                      the ‘consumer’, as it is never a matter of verifying (with an ‘audience’) the real meaning
                      of, say, Platoon. The focus on consumption (understood as ‘production in use’) is to
                      explore the political effectivity (or otherwise) of, say, Platoon. If a cultural text is to
                      become effective (politically or otherwise) it must be made to connect with people’s
                      lives – become part of their ‘lived culture’. Formal analysis of Hollywood’s Vietnam may
                      point to how the industry has articulated the war as an American tragedy of bravery and
                      betrayal, but this does not tell us that it has been consumed as a war of bravery and
                      betrayal.
                         In  the  absence  of  ethnographic  work  on  the  audience  for  Hollywood’s  Vietnam,
                      I want to point to two pieces of evidence that may provide us with clues to the circu-
                      lation  and  effectivity  of  Hollywood’s  articulation  of  the  war.  The  first  consists  of
                      speeches made by President George Bush in the build-up to the first Gulf War, and
                      the  second  are  comments  made  by  American  Vietnam  veterans  about  Hollywood
                      and other representations of the war. But, to be absolutely clear, these factors, how-
                      ever  compelling  they  may  be  in  themselves,  do  not  provide  conclusive  proof  that
                      Hollywood’s account of the war has become hegemonic where it matters – in the lived
                      practices of everyday life.
                         In  the  weeks  leading  up  to  the  first  Gulf  War,  Newsweek (10  December  1990)
                      featured a cover showing a photograph of a serious-looking George Bush. Above the
                      photograph was the banner headline, ‘This will not be another Vietnam’. The headline
                      was taken from a speech made by Bush in which he said, ‘In our country, I know that
                      there  are  fears  of  another  Vietnam.  Let  me  assure  you . . . this  will  not  be  another
                      Vietnam’. In another speech, Bush again assured his American audience that, ‘This will
                      not be another Vietnam’. But this time he explained why: ‘Our troops will have the best
                      possible support in the entire world. They will not be asked to fight with one hand tied
                      behind their backs’ (quoted in the Daily Telegraph, January 1991).
                         In these speeches, Bush was seeking to put to rest a spectre that had come to haunt
                      America’s political and military self-image, what former President Richard Nixon had
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