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September, 2008

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John Wayne

Last night, BHS screened John Wayne’s The Green Berets (1968), the first film in the series Cinema of the Vietnam War that we are co-hosting with Brooklyn For Peace.

What a cultural artifact!  One of the Vietnam veterans in the audience said it was like a 2.5 hour long recruitment movie, and that’s a good description.  Marilyn Young, author of The Vietnam Wars who lead a discussion with the audience, noted that John Wayne actually got permission from President Johnson to make the film on a military base in Georgia.  They were given access to all kinds of military equipment – and that was actually the most interesting part for me, having heard many personal stories about Vietnam I was finally able to see what a claymore mine looks like (bigger than I thought) and get a better sense of helicopter travel (although much disbelief must be suspended to believe that Georgian woods are Southeast Asian jungle).

The pro-war film was a box office hit (in 1968!), which makes it even more disturbing to watch John Wayne’s iconic, macho, and irresponsible response to death: a brief drop of his eyebrows, and then he’s over it.  One particularly saccharine and out-of-touch moment I noticed was a soldier wearing his green beret over the gauze wrapping a headwound he suffered during a mortar attack; a tight, sweaty wool beret over clean bandages?  Suffice to say, the Communist Threat was as alive and well in John Wayne’s imagination in 1968 as it was in Joseph McCarthy’s in 1950 – and we can all feel confident that U.S. will win the war as we watch the amber sun setting beautifully over the Pacific Ocean which, by the way, is on the eastern coast of Vietnam.

The film is such an anachronism, even for 1968, I won’t even bother to go into how they depict women who put themselves at physical risk for their country.

Watch The Green Berets Trailer

Goodbye Astroland!

photo by Mashyguy on Flickr

We’ll always have the Cyclone and the Wonder Wheel though!

Recent Photographic Find

I have a mystery box.  This mystery box is filled with things that come out of drawers, unlabeled boxes, nooks and crannies, seemingly nowhere.  Occasionally, I pluck something out of this mystery box and decide what it is, what to do with it, where it came from, and to whom I should show it.  This plucking tends to occur on Saturday mornings when the library is scheduled to open in the afternoon.  On one such Saturday, I came upon this inconspicuous scrapbook.  From the outside, it looks like something haphazardly put together, probably never completed, of ordinary family snapshots.  Even the first couple of pages support that theory.  There are pictures of circus tents, street scenes, and stiff portraits of various individuals identified in a scratchy but legible script.  Four pages in, I came across two photographs of a little baby plagued with congenital hydrocephalus.  This is a sad story because the baby died shortly after the picture was taken from this condition, but the pictures are stunning — stunning for their ordinariness format amidst the breath-stifling subject. The scrapbook goes on to illustrate in breadth the building of Kings County Hospital and is identified with captions.

The scrapbook

The scrapbook

The photographer perhaps?

The photographer perhaps?

The first page of photographs
The first page of photographs

Unfortunately, I don’t know how we acquired this scrapbook of photographs or from whom it came, but as I find the time (or the intern) to research it, I will inform everyone of updates.  Feel free to stop by and check it out the next time you visit the library.

Park Slope Food Coop

Seventeen seconds of sound from the Park Slope Food Coop, recorded today around 11:30am.

Click here to listen:

Park Slope Food Coop Today

Lesbian Herstory Archives

Today took me to the Lesbian Herstory Archives in Park Slope to interview one of their volunteer staff  for our forthcoming Park Slope Neighborhood Guide‘s audio component.  They have over 2,000 tapes of oral history in their collection that they are slowly digitizing.  It’s a warm, welcoming, and inspiring place.

photo courtesy of the Lesbian Herstory Archives