ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos


Courses Videos 906 videos

American Literature: Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
8968 Views

Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, abridged. Ready? Go.

American Literature: Emily Dickinson
4357 Views

Emily Dickinson: Along with Van Gogh, proof that you’re never really famous until you’re dead.

American Literature: Give Me Liberty or Give Me Death, But I'd Prefer Liberty
322 Views

We’ll take one order of liberty, but hold the death.

See All

American Literature: The Things They Carried 11056 Views


Share It!


Description:

You know what you're going to carry away from this lesson on The Things They Carried? Knowledge. There's no better takeaway than knowledge...except for pizza, obviously.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:02

The Things They Carried.....

00:31

you know they always said I'd be

00:33

happy to be back home after the war but it's awfully boring just hanging around [Camouflage t-shirt talking]

00:37

like this fortunately I've been killing time by reading The Things They Carried

00:42

a 1990 short story collection by Tim O'Brien our author Tim O'Brien was born

00:49

in Austin in 1946 no not Austin, Texas the hipster capital of the southeast but

00:55

Austin Minnesota the spam capital of the US for real they even have a spam Museum [A tin of Spam appears]

01:01

in 1968 while at Macalester College O'Brien was drafted into the United

01:05

States Army and sent to Vietnam he stayed in Vietnam until 1970 serving in

01:11

the same division that was involved in the horrendous milay massacre an

01:14

unprovoked attack in which American soldiers massacred hundreds of innocent [Innocent vietnamese civillians appear]

01:19

civilians upon completing his tour of duty O'Brien went to graduate school at

01:23

Harvard and got an internship at the Washington Post which was one of those

01:27

old tiny newspaper things from an active war zone to a coffee break room talk

01:32

about a jump in workplace safety standards

01:34

O'Brien began his writing career in earnest in 1973 with the publication of [Tim writing in an office]

01:39

if I die in a combat zone box me up and ship me home

01:42

a memoir which documents his tour in Vietnam and also easily wins our

01:47

semiannual way too wordy of a title award although O'Brien would write some

01:52

fiction over the years like the novel's going after cacciato and the nuclear age [O'Brien's novels appear]

01:57

it wasn't until 1990 that he released his next major book The Things They

02:01

Carried the things they carried isn't exactly an easy book to summarize

02:05

technically speaking it's a collection of short stories each chapter is its own

02:09

thing you could pick up any one of them and you'd have a [Person picks up The Things They Carried book]

02:12

a satisfying story from a beginning middle and end they're set in distinct time periods

02:16

both during O'Brien's tour in Vietnam and after it and they feature different

02:21

main characters each time around so O'Brien remains the narrator the

02:25

whole time despite the differences however each story also features the [US Soldiers in line]

02:29

same set of characters similar themes and even reference to same event sure

02:34

sounds novel ish right and we're not done yet the book is also semi

02:38

autobiographical it takes influence from its author's life there's a character

02:42

named O'Brien who just so happens to be a writer [O'Brien in army gear walking through jungle]

02:45

O'Brien even mentions his novel going after cacciato which he wrote in real

02:49

life the book also purposely messes with our heads with O'Brien explicitly

02:54

stating at several points that he's been lying to us throughout the book

02:58

The book follows the men of O'Brien squad Alpha Company first

03:03

lieutenant Jimmy cross, rat Kylie, Kiowa Mitchell Sanders, Norman Bakker, Ted

03:09

lavender the whole gang actually scratch that lavender dies almost immediately in [Lavendar falls to the floor]

03:14

the opening story O'Brien tells us exactly what the title of the novel means on

03:17

one hand he's referring to the physical things they carried by the soldiers like

03:21

medicine weaponry or even bags of M&Ms but the title also refers to the [Soldier wounded in a trench]

03:26

metaphorical things being carried by the men like guilt fear and indigestion one

03:32

big moment is when O'Brien kills a Vietnamese soldier assumedly his first

03:36

of the war in shock O'Brien tries to deduce the dead guy's life story

03:41

deciding that he was a former scholar a secret anti-communist and the host of a

03:45

surprisingly popular YouTube channel about miniature trains, O'Brien later

03:49

reveals that this incident was totally untrue he never killed anyone but will

03:53

discuss that issue more in a bit another big moment is the death of Kiowa a [Kiowa's headstone appears]

03:57

Native American soldier and close friend of O'Brien although again we're left

04:01

with the sense that O'Brien tales might be a bit tall if you catch my drift

04:05

O'Brien admits that he's changed details of Kiowas death when telling the story [Person writing and scribbles out sentence]

04:09

previously which naturally leads us to wonder if he's being entirely honest

04:13

with us here to this end the final story the lives of the dead completely shifts

04:18

gears focusing on O'Brien's childhood sweetheart Linda who tragically died at [Linda appears and falls to the ground]

04:22

her youth in the story O'Brien explained that he's found

04:26

way to keep Linda alive not by performing some bizarre magical ritual

04:30

but by telling stories about her by sharing stories about Linda the same way

04:35

that he shares stories about his former comrade O'Brien can keep them all alive

04:39

and well inside his head he can ensure that their memories aren't forgotten

04:44

so maybe O'Brien stories aren't 100 percent accurate but then again maybe

04:48

they're not meant to be instead they're simply a way for O'Brien to hold on to [O'Brien thinking about his comrades]

04:52

the many people he's lost along the way let's look at a few individual stories

04:57

starting with how to tell a true war story the story begins with the best

05:00

first line ever this is true as we've already discussed one of the major

05:06

themes of the things they carried is truth and how much O'Brien is willing to [Women stretching in a field]

05:10

bend it but here O'Brien is mostly concerned with what make a proper war

05:15

story.....

05:26

well it has to be filled with obscenity and evil not

05:28

to sound like the narrator of a horror movie it also has to be totally [T-shirt discussing chapter of O'Brien's novel]

05:31

depressing no good feels here and don't expect a war story to teach you any

05:36

lessons if a war story teaches you anything it's that you shouldn't expect

05:40

lessons from stories in other words a war story should be as hard as a [Tupac appears on stage]

05:45

gangster rap album notice too how O'Brien defined war stories in terms of

05:50

what they're not as we saw earlier a war story does not impart any moral lessons

05:55

never moral.....

06:03

but it also can't be believed....

06:07

nor can it be fully understood and

06:12

analyzed............and incomprehensible immoral unbelievable mess sounds of a frat party

06:21

and what's a good war story in O'Brien's eyes well most importantly it [Soldiers fires a rifle]

06:25

must capture the actual experience of being in war, rather than stretching

06:29

the truth to make the subjects seem especially heroic brave or noble we also

06:34

see a couple of examples of war stories to varying degrees of believability like

06:39

when a group of soldiers unleash their entire arsenal after hearing Vietnamese [Army tent appears and shots fired]

06:43

music in the middle of the night or when they randomly kill a baby water buffalo

06:47

or when a soldier accidentally blows himself up with his own smoke grenade [Smoke grenade explodes and Jimmy Cross appears]

06:51

none of those little stories are particularly meaty not a ton going on so

06:55

why does O'Brian tell them well remember his criteria for a good war story good

07:00

war stories are impossible to analyze these little tales meet the mark on

07:05

that count they lack any sort of moral lesson can't say we learn anything from

07:09

the murder of a water buffalo so check that sucker off the list and [Person ticks off item from good war story checklist]

07:14

finally they're depressing an accidental death a spontaneous shootout and animal

07:19

murder can't get more depressing than that also though it may be difficult for

07:23

us to pinpoint the exact meaning of these stories it's this difficulty that

07:27

makes them such good war stories in O'Brien's eyes to O'Brien war is chaotic [Soldiers fighting in a field]

07:33

brutal and often feels meaningless which is why war stories must have the same

07:38

qualities we learn this lesson another way when O'Brien tells us about his

07:42

buddy, Rat Kiley who wrote his heart staggeringly beautiful letter to

07:47

his sister of a fallen member of their crew and what happened does she write

07:51

back planning a meeting for when rat returns to America? start a torrid love

07:55

affair with him over World of Warcraft the answer is none of the above she did

08:00

nothing didn't make a peep O'Brien compares this sitch to how older women

08:04

come up to him after readings and ask him to talk about something else besides [Elderly woman approaches O'Brien]

08:08

war not understanding how important it is for him to continue sharing stories

08:12

of his lost friends like we discussed before it's his only way of keeping them

08:16

alive in both instances we see how civilians can't understand what veterans

08:21

have gone through even if they lost a family member in the

08:24

war like the woman rat writes the letter to the outro is maybe the most

08:28

interesting part of the story however [Outro chapter appears]

08:37

O'Brien basically admits that he

08:39

fabricates parts of his stories to get across the deeper truth he's trying to

08:43

convey in his mind it's less important whether he nails the facts and figures [Facts and figures sign falls off wall]

08:47

than whether he accurately conveys what it felt like to go through those

08:52

experiences just check out this closing paragraph......

09:03

some unusual things to compare

09:04

with war right the dawn mountains love sounds more like a romantic drama

09:09

than a war story but what O'Brien is actually saying is that his war [Woman throws glass of water into mans face]

09:13

experiences are subjective they're open to interpretation and personal

09:17

experience a war story simply shows the reader what it felt like to be there

09:21

what it felt like to march into unknown Mountains filled with enemy soldiers and

09:26

what it felt like to live in constant fear of tomorrow's battle so the marker [Soldier prone in a field reloads weapon]

09:31

of a good war story isn't that it conveys some citation heavy deeply

09:35

researched historical truth or packs in more explosions than a fast and furious

09:40

movie instead a good war story should make you experience all the suffering

09:44

and terror endured by soldiers every day while not forgetting the moments of

09:48

triumph and camaraderie that equally define O'Brien's time on the war front [Children helping soldiers with boxes]

09:52

next up let's check out speaking of courage in this chapter we hang out with

09:57

Norman Bowker on the fourth of July after he returns to America instead of

10:01

watching fireworks and downing hot dogs like he's at Coney Island, Bowker is

10:05

driving in circles around a lake alone he feels like he can't talk to anyone [Bowker driving a car by a lake]

10:10

since coming back to America even his dad

10:12

in fact Bowker wishes his pops was here right now so he could tell him about how

10:17

he almost earned a Silver Star for valor Alpha Company had been camping beside a

10:21

river called song tra bong when the river overflowed

10:24

but song tra bong isn't an ordinary river how do I put this lightly [Man pooping in a river]

10:28

it's where the local villagers poop sorry that wasn't light at all

10:33

some point Kiowa seems to get hit by something and begin sinking into the mud [Kiowa sinking into the mud]

10:38

Bowker tries to free his buddy for a while but has little success so he runs

10:42

turns around and never looks back leaving poor Kiowa to get stuck under

10:46

the quicksand and die this story touches on the isolation felt by soldiers who [Bowker sinking in mud and soldier appears with head in his hands]

10:51

return home from war... sure it's great to be able to go to work without having to

10:56

dodge bullets but there seems to be a feeling of emptiness shared by these

11:00

Vietnam vets upon their return to America nobody understands what war is

11:04

really like they know about the bad stuff sure but they don't understand the

11:08

feeling of camaraderie accomplishment and purpose that come along with all the

11:13

suffering and if Bowker tried to share his experiences with normal folks they

11:17

have no idea what he was talking about sort of like the old women who [Bowker discussing war with a waiter]

11:21

approached O'Brien after book readings or their fallen comrades sister who Rat

11:26

writes a letter to the other main idea of this story is right there in the

11:29

title courage, Bowker seems to think that his lack of courage caused Kiowa to die

11:34

even though there's no evidence to back up that notion like come on the guy was [Bowker running away and Kiowa sinking]

11:38

being consumed by a pool of quick sand that was also poop

11:41

there's no coming back from that but maybe this feeling that he's not

11:45

courageous enough is exactly what prevents Bowker from sharing his war

11:49

stories to his dad even though sharing his stories might be the exact thing

11:53

that could help him but hey O'Brien just told us to not interpret morals from

11:57

war stories so we'll follow his orders for now interestingly the next story

12:02

notes is all about the process of writing this one how Bowker had described this [Person holding envelope to O'Brien]

12:07

scene to O'Brien in a letter and how O'Brien had included it at first in his

12:12

novel going after cacciato but O'Brien changed key details characters and

12:17

events as his par for the course when writing a fictional account of a real

12:20

story but that nonsense isn't good enough for Bowker he wanted his story with

12:25

the muddy field Kiowa and hopefully Leonardo DiCaprio starring as himself in [Di Caprio as a soldier appears]

12:29

the eventual film adaptation 10 years later

12:32

O'Brien finally takes Bowker's advice and writes that story this story the one

12:37

we're reading right now well a story about writing a story we just read [Man reading a book]

12:41

O'Brien blowin minds like his name was David Blaine the final story we'll be

12:45

looking at is called good form sounds more like a chapter in a grammar

12:49

textbook than a war novel name aside this story's the M night Shyamalan twist

12:53

to the entire book you ready for it everything you read so far is a lie...

12:58

here's what's true O'Brien is indeed 43 a writer and a

13:02

veteran of the Vietnam War everything else not so much [Facts on Tim O'Brien appear]

13:05

to help us understand this concept O'Brien explains that there are two different

13:10

types of truth there's happening truth which is the

13:13

sort of truth that we normally think about the reality of a situation so they

13:17

happening truth is the most recent date you went on would be things you did on it [Man and woman sitting at a table on a date]

13:22

what movie you saw and what restaurant you went to and then there's story truth

13:26

which is the way that something felt even if that feeling doesn't entirely

13:30

match up with reality so the story truth of that date would be how it felt, maybe

13:35

you were so in love that the burgers tasted like filet mignon and the diet

13:39

Fanta like champagne it's at this point that O'Brien reveals that he never

13:44

actually killed that Vietnamese soldier he was talking about but instead simply [Vietnamese soldier falls to the ground and O'Brien appears]

13:48

saw someone else kill him, see the happening truth is that O'Brien saw a

13:53

crazy amount of death in Vietnam so much that he still can't entirely understand

13:58

what happened but the story truth is that O'Brien felt

14:01

responsible for that death to some degree which is why he creates a

14:05

fictional story in which he actually was responsible for one of those deaths by

14:09

embellishing personal details about the Vietnamese soldier that he didn't

14:13

actually know O'Brien is creating a story truth that he feels accurately [Soldiers aiming rifles in the bushes]

14:18

reflects how it felt to be on the war front we should also think about what

14:22

O'Brien means when he talks about form in literature form refers to the way in

14:27

which something is written O'Brien explains that narratives are simply a

14:31

method of distribution for him separate entirely from the things he's writing

14:36

about that are known as his content for O'Brien the content is the emotional [Young boy soldier appears]

14:40

aspects of war the stuff that's hard to define and convey think of narratives as

14:45

pizza delivery boxes sure the box is important to a degree but it's not as

14:49

important as the sweet sweet pizza on the inside the pizza in this case being

14:53

O'Brien's war experiences so we might now better understand why O'Brien plays [O'Brien holds cards up to his face]

14:59

so fast and loose with the fact it's the only way he can explain an

15:03

experience that seems even now to be unexplainable now that you've learned

15:07

all about the things they carried let's consider the nuggets of knowledge you'll [Man carrying nuggets]

15:11

carry away from this lesson well maybe you should think about how Tim O'Brien's

15:16

personal experience in the Vietnam War made him the perfect person to write

15:20

about the conflict for the masses not that he keeps things conventional or

15:24

anything The Things They Carried is a fascinating book that combines aspects

15:28

of a short story collection novel and memoir interestingly the things they

15:32

carried is quite ambiguous when it comes to war itself

15:36

O'Brien argues that we shouldn't view his stories as moral lessons of any sort

15:40

of course we can do a little interpretation while O'Brien clearly [Important information on O'Brien novel appears]

15:44

feels a strong sense of camaraderie with his fellow soldiers he ultimately sees

15:49

war as chaotic meaningless and well just lame...

15:53

finally the things they carried shows us how hard of a time Vietnam vets had

15:57

reintegrating with society a struggle likely shared by veterans of all stripes

16:01

and not to mention us uniforms too after all I used to be worn by a five-star [T-shirt talking about vietnam war]

16:06

general for patton sake now the best I have to hope for is to be bought by a

16:11

hippie with minimal body odor not a good sign....

Related Videos

Catching Fire (Part 2)
6719 Views

“Happy Hunger Games!” Or not. Katniss’s Hunger Games experiences left a not-so-happy effect on her. This video will prompt you to ponder if...

One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
47687 Views

Who's really the crazy one in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest? Shmoop amongst yourselves.

Edgar Allan Poe: The Twilight Connection
3322 Views

Sure, Edgar Allan Poe was dark and moody and filled with teenage angst, but what else does he have in common with the Twilight series?

El Gran Gatsby
866 Views

¿Por que es el 'Gran' Gatsby tan gran? ¿Porque de su nombre peculiar? ¿Porque de el misterio que le rodea? Se ha discutido esta pregunta por muc...

Fahrenheit 451
84302 Views

Would would the world be like without books? Ray Bradbury tackles that question—and many more— in Fahrenheit 451. Go ahead; read it on your Kin...