Memorializing the War Dead
“Looking back at that moment through the prism of the Vietnam conflict and flurry of succeeding assassinations of Malcolm X, the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr., and Robert Kennedy-the sixties seem to have begun not on the day of 1960 but on November 22, 1963. On that day American began to turn from optimism toward cynicism, from conformity to nonconformity, from excess toward simplicity. The new cultural mood reached into all areas of American life, including the funeral industry.”[1] In order to understand the internment of Vietnam war dead this website provides a background on the funeral industry as a whole. For further reading on Vietnam related burial rituals see: No One Here Gets Out Alive: Memorializing, Mourning, and Reconciling the Vietnam War Dead
Shad Thielman recieved his MA in History from California State University San Marcos. A veteran, Shad’s focus is the relationship between race, class, culture, and social constructs in the United States during the twentieth-century. Shad’s current research examines American burial traditions and highlights the changing attitudes and perspectives towards burial rituals during the Vietnam era (1955-1975).
To contact the author please send email to: thiel019@cougars.csusm.edu
[1] Stephen R. Prothero, Purified by Fire: A History of Cremation in America (Los Angeles: University of California Press, 2001).