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The Things They Carried

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The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien
ENG 1300 W5A2 Andrea Carr
South University Online

The Things They Carried by Tim O’Brien

“The Things They Carried” is one of several short stories written by Tim O’Brien that brilliantly portrays a squad of young American soldiers in the Vietnam War. Each of the short stories builds on the last but in The Things They Carried the author places focus on how immature boys cope and their transformation into young men and responsible leaders. O’Brien is not a character in the story but the fact that he is fluent with military lingo and conveys great passion and a working knowledge of the military suggests that he was a soldier. He tells his war story of soldiers’ experiences with obsession, duty, regret, burden, comradely and maturing. He achieves this by describing every facet of the items they carried with great accuracy and detail. The things they carried as they are depicted in the story represent literal things, emotional things, psychological things and symbolic things all weighing in at different levels of importance. There were physical as well as emotional things they carried on their missions, both were equally burdensome. O’Brien states that during missions many of these items were discarded no regardless of their importance to achieve a higher level of comfort. The author further states that the choppers would effortlessly replace the discarded items. In research conducted by Michael Tavel Clarke he implies that this behavior is immature, irresponsible and wasteful. Clarke also points out the blatant transformation of Cross into a disciplined leader.
The things they carried identified them by rank and military occupation specialty. While some of the physical items seem silly to many it didn’t make them any less of a necessity. The author states “By necessity, and because it was SOP, they all carried steel helmets that weighed 5 pounds including the liner and camouflage cover. They carried the standard fatigue jackets and trousers.”(p 184) In addition to these items each soldier had to wear a flak jacket that weighed 6.7 pounds and added at least 8 degrees to their body temperature. He also says “Among the necessities or near-necessities were P38 can openers, pocket knives, heat tabs, wristwatches, dog tags, mosquito repellant, chewing gum, candy, cigarettes, salt tablets, packets of Kool-aid, lighters, matches, sewing kits, Military Payment Certificates, C rations and two or three canteens of water.”(p 184) These items were required to be carried by all of them. The items required by army doctrine to be carried by all of the soldiers groups them together literally by their association with the military and war, but this grouping could also be symbolic. They were made to carry large compress bandages or pressure dressings used to stop perfuse bleeding each man carried at least two one conveniently located in their helmet band for quick access in the event someone was injured. To look over and see everyone to your left and right with the bandage is a constant reminder that you are always at risk. The helmets that lack the bandage carries a completely different psychological toll and serves as a constant reminder of those that have fallen. The author gives the characters identities and personality by listing separate items that each solder prefers to carry because of a character flaw or an eccentricity. The big guy Dobbins is a machine gunner. Likely hand selected for that job because of his size and ability to consistently carry the 23 pound M-60 and up to an additional 15 pounds of ammunition. Extra rations brought him comfort. He carried canned peaches with heavy syrup and pound cake to be exact. Ted Lavender was a rifleman. He was admittedly scared and as a result he carried an M-79 grenade launcher with 34 rounds of ammunition. He also carried tranquilizers and dope very likely to cope with his fear. Sanders is the RTO who carries a PRC-25 radio with an extra battery. Oddly he also carried condoms. The story doesn’t allude to why he carried condoms but they are said to keep the muzzle of an M-16 dry and free of rust. Sanders likely used them in a more personal manner however in an attempt to cope with the stressors of war. The young man they called Rat Kiley was a medic. Medics traditionally carry an aid bag with medical supplies to include morphine and blood products for obvious reasons. Rat also carried M&M candies and comic books. Even though these different items separate the group and give them individuality there is a common theme that the dope, the comic books, the candy and the condoms represent, and that is youth and immaturity. Jensen is portrayed in the story as very hygienic perhaps overly hygienic if there is such a thing. He carries extra toiletries and socks while Bowker carried a diary, Kiowa also a rifleman carried a new testament presented to him by his preacher father and an old hunting hatched wrapped in distrust for the white man courtesy of his grandfather. The author describes Kiowa in a nostalgic state laid out using his father’s bible as a pillow. His exquisite and detailed description of Kiowa’s interaction with the bible and how it feels and smells gives the reader an exclusive outlook. Clark argues that the things they carried were excessive and that the American soldiers were wasteful. He references O’Brien’s excerpt as it pertained to these things and how they threw them away purely for comfort. Clarke refrained from making mention to any symbolic or metaphorical representation of the things they carried.
Lieutenants are officers and leaders by trade. Lieutenants make command decisions and ensure that everyone is doing what they are supposed to be doing and carrying the things that they need to carry. In addition to the afore mentioned items lieutenant Cross carried all of the intelligence items such as maps, code books and binoculars. O’Brien further suggests that Cross as a leader carries the responsibility for the lives of his men. He describes it as if it were something tangible that he could just throw in his rucksack. What a huge preconceived burden for such a young man to be forced to carry. O’Brien writes “To carry something was to hump it, as when Lieutenant Jimmy Cross humped his love for Martha up the hills and through the swamps.” He carried his lust like every other thing that weighed him down. Lieutenant Cross also carries letters and photos from Martha. She was a woman he is obsessed with, but knows to be true that she does not share his sentiment. He clings to the obsession because it brings him solace during such a difficult time. He also carries a pebble that she sent him from the white sands of the Jersey Shore. The letters coupled with his pre war memory of her bring him comfort in midst of war. The young lieutenant starts his tour of duty in a lust filled haze. He is forced to ponder his shortcomings as a leader when Lavender is killed in action as a direct result of his inattention to detail and lackadaisical leadership. Guilt stricken and riddled with grief, Cross burns the letters and photos of Martha. He cries for his brother in arms and he carries his grief as he begins to accept the reality of his relationship with Martha for what it is. The combination of burning the town and Kiowa’s description of Lavenders death jarred the infatuated sex craved Lieutenant Cross into maturity and into the dutiful and responsible leader he is meant to be. Clarke states “The central narrative of the destruction of Than Khe is quickly displaced and repressed by the more trivial story of Lt. Cross’s unrequited love for Martha.” (141)
In summary, war stories can be interpreted differently by different people. Different people can also come to the same or similar conclusion via different pathways and interpreting different connotations. The article written by Clarke brought to light a whole list of different symbolisms and topics. O’Brien uses lists and elaborate descriptions to represent the magnitude of the burden placed upon them. Each of the men in the story coped differently and each of them grieved differently. Some of the men carried the same burdens while others eluded major emotional burdens. They all carried each thing differently. Some had stronger suites while others struggled. Regardless of the limitations evident in Open House, Seager pointed out that "most of the reviews were good and those that contained adverse criticisms tacitly acknowledged that this was the work of a genuine poet and not a beginner." Marveling at Roethke's "rare" ability to "remember and to transform the humiliation ['of feeling physically soiled and humiliated by life'] into something beautiful," W. H. Auden called Open House "completely successful." In another review of the book, Elizabeth Drew felt "his poems have a controlled grace of movement and his images the utmost precision; while in the expression of a kind of gnomic wisdom which is peculiar to him as he attains an austerity of contemplation and a pared, spare strictness of language very unusual in poets of today."

References

Kennedy, Gioia, X. (2012). The Literature Collection [VitalSouce bookshelf version].
Retrieved from http://digitalbookshelf.southuniversity.edu/books/9781269582674/outline/20

Clarke, M. T. (2013). "I feel close to myself": solipsism and us imperialism in Tim O’Brien’s the things they carried. The Free Library. ,. Retrieved from http://www.thefreelibrary.com/%22I+feel+close+to+myself%22%3a+solipsism+and+us+imperialism+in+Tim...-a0334285262

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