Armando JosE Prats is Professor Emeritus of English at the University of Kentucky and the author of Invisible Natives: Myth and Identity in the American Western.
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"Armando Prats' Hollywood's Imperial Wars is an incisive history and critique of the way war movies shaped Americans' myth of heroic identity, and how filmmakers have responded to the fracturing of that myth by the failed wars in Vietnam and Iraq."-Richard Slotkin, author of Gunfighter Nation "Hollywood's Imperial Wars provides a compelling new perspective on the cultural complexity of the films under discussion and unfolds how the "heroic legacy" and the sense of entitlement to that legacy and fears about its legitimacy have traced a bloodstained path through the history of Hollywood and the United States."-Susan M. White, author of The Cinema of Max Ophuls "Hollywood's Imperial Wars is a richly detailed account, analysis, and critique of the roots of white male American heroism in its Hollywood forms from Westerns to proto-colonialist, World War II, and Cold War movies to Vietnam and its aftermath. Armando JosE Prats shows us how and why the heroic myths of American triumphalism were replaced by tragic and ironic accounts of loss and betrayal in the wake of historical defeat in Vietnam. Going beyond Prats's earlier books about cinematic narration (The Autonomous Image) and the representation of indigenous Americans in Hollywood Westerns (Invisible Natives), this is an illuminating and provocative study of American exceptionalism and its discontents."-Mark A. Heberle, author of A Trauma Artist: Tim O'Brien and the Fiction of Vietnam