Description
A dissonant remembrance of William Spanos's experiences as a WWII soldier and German POW
About the Author
William V. Spanos is Distinguished Professor of English and comparative literature at the State University of New York at Binghamton. He is the author of many books, including America's Shadow: An Anatomy of Empire and American Exceptionalism in the Age of Globalization: The Specter of Vietnam.
Reviews
"This is the most moving memoir of World War II that I have read, and the most honest. In a style lucid, powerful, and reflective, it gives the lie to any war being 'the good war' and discloses the fiery terror Britain and its U.S. ally rained down on Dresden and the terrible aftermath civilians and soldiers, on both sides, had to deal with. A masterpiece of the genre."-Daniel T. O'Hara, professor of English and humanities at Temple University and author of Visions of Global America and the Future of Critical Reading
"William Spanos's In the Neighborhood of Zero bears uncanny witness to the historical trauma of the fire-bombing of Dresden. In so doing, Spanos's counter-memory exposes U.S. history's efforts to replace the traumatic referent of Dresden with the narrative of America, the Redeemer Nation. Humanity in the neighborhood of zero, William Spanos reminds us, results in the becoming flesh of the state of emergency. As the witness to what cannot be articulated in historical categories, it is this figure who speaks the silences in Spanos's unforgettable testimonial."-Donald E. Pease, Avalon Foundation Chair of the Humanities at Dartmouth College and author of The New American Exceptionalism
"Professor Spanos deeply impacted my views on literature and language when I was a student of his, but nothing prepared me for the power and emotion of this memoir. It is an amazing saga of one man's journey through World War II-but it is also the story of the immigrant experience in America, of a soldier, of a prisoner of war, of lost innocence and the courage needed to move past that loss. Most of all, it is unforgettable."-Marc Lawrence, writer and director of Two Weeks Notice, Music and Lyrics, and Did You Hear About the Morgans?
"Written by an accomplished author, this thoughtful and unnerving memoir unearths his experience as a US GI in World War II, who was taken prisoner by the Germans and shipped to Dresden, where he witnessed the impact of the Allied firebombing of that city."-ForeWord
Book Information
ISBN 9780803226814
Author William V. Spanos
Format Hardback
Page Count 218
Imprint University of Nebraska Press
Publisher University of Nebraska Press