[March 11th marks the 80th anniversary of General Douglas MacArthur’s famous departure from the Philippines. So this week I’ll AmericanStudy that moment and four other aspects of the war’s Pacific Theater, leading up to a special post on the U.S.-Filipino relationship.]
On three texts
that can help us AmericanStudy a lengthy, pivotal
military campaign.
1)
Kawaguchi’s quote: “Guadalcanal is no longer
merely a name of an island in Japanese military history. It is the name of the
graveyard of the Japanese army.” So stated Major General
Kiyotake Kawaguchi, commander of the first Japanese infantry brigade to
attempt to retake the island after the Allied occupation. The back and forth
battle for control of Guadalcanal, its strategically crucial Henderson
(air)Field, and other neighboring Solomon Islands would stretch from August
1942 through February 1943, with any number of moments and conflicts that could
have provided turning points in an alternative history of not only this
campaign but the war’s (and world’s) future more broadly. Yet ultimately the
result was the result—and as the Pacific Theater’s first truly substantive
battle, that result fundamentally shifted the balance of power in the region
and the war. Although of course the war would go on for two and a half more
long and highly contested years, Kawaguchi’s quote helps us understand just how
much the die was cast at Guadalcanal.
2)
Guadalcanal Diary (1943): In a
strikingly new development in war journalism, International News Service correspondent
Richard
Tregaskis accompanied the Allied forces for months in the early stages of
the battle, documenting both everyday experiences and the campaign’s biggest
moments. The resulting book was published in January 1943, before the campaign
had even concluded, and respresented a more immediate and grounded portrayal of
war than any prior American text. That doesn’t mean it’s necessarily more
factually or historically accurate—the book is a personal memoir, as its title
suggests, and so the same uncertainties
of memory and truth that accompany any personal narrative apply—but the
rawness and honesty of its perspective and details offers a kind of
experiential accuracy nonetheless. This is what the campaign felt like, to a
man who lived it and the men with whom he shared it. In November a Hollywood film
adaptation of the book would be released, and it too felt more personal
than most of the war’s big-budget
blockbusters; but there’s no beating the book for that raw representation
of wartime experiences.
3)
The Thin Red Line (1962): James
Jones’s fourth novel was based, as were a number of his novels before and after
(including his most famous, From Here to Eternity [1951]), on
his experiences in World War II’s Pacific Theater; Thin in particular focuses on three battles from the Guadalcanal
campaign. Although Terence
Malick’s controversial 1998 film adaptation of the novel certainly
amplifies these qualities, the book too is far more detached and (at times)
dreamlike than Tregaskis’ journalistic text. It balances those aspects,
however, with some of the most gritty and realistic depictions of violence in
any World War II novel, leading military historian John Keegan to call it (in
his 1983
book The Face of Battle) one of
the two best literary portrayals of the war. In its naturalistic depiction of a
battle and war that are far bigger than any of their individual participants,
Jones’s book also compares favorably to such classics as Stephen Crane’s The Red Badge of Courage (1895) and
Erich Maria Remarque’s All Quiet on the
Western Front (1929). This is a vital war novel for perhaps the Pacific
Theater’s most vital battle.
Next
PacificStudying tomorrow,
Ben
PS. What do you
think? Other aspects of the Pacific Theater you’d highlight?
My parents bought Guadalcanal Diary when it was published, so reading it in the late 40's was an early exposure to war. (Along with T.E.Lawrence Seven Pillars, and the five-volume history of WWI.) The Eugene Sledge memoir is good.
ReplyDeleteJust finished the second McManus book on the US Army in the Pacific "Island Infernos". I like the depiction of tensions and conflict among the US commanders, and how the mode of combat reflected the two societies--US versus Japan. I was struck by the usage of "Jap" by all US--quite a change from 1944 to now.
Thanks so much for those thoughts, Bill! I grew up on Morrison's The Two-Ocean War, but it's time for an update and the McManus book sounds excellent.
ReplyDeleteBen