Why do we love watching what we hate?
War is the worst thing humans do to each other: trauma manufactured at industrial scale, the collapse of every civilising impulse into organised butchery. Yet we queue up for the latest war film. We buy the popcorn. We settle into our seats as the screen fills with thunder and screams. We call it entertainment.
This book is for everyone who has ever watched a war film and felt that strange mixture of horror and fascination, of pity and thrill. It is for those who have wondered what it says about them that they cannot look away.
From the beaches of Saving Private Ryan to the jungles of Apocalypse Now, from the moral certainties of The Sands of Iwo Jima to the bitter disillusionment of Platoon, from the claustrophobic depths of Das Boot to the shattered homecomings of The Best Years of Our Lives—this book explores not just the films themselves but the audience who watches them.
What does our appetite for cinematic combat reveal about who we are?
Drawing on neuroscience, narrative theory, the psychology of fear, and the ethics of spectatorship, The Good Fight examines why we watch war films, who we follow into battle, and what the genre's evolution tells us about the nations that made them. It walks through the landscapes of combat—the beach, the jungle, the city, the sky and sea—and confronts the uncomfortable questions: the aesthetics of violence, the absence of women, the aftermath that never ends.
Finally, it looks beyond the battlefield to the war film's secret cousins: the gangster film as urban warfare, the Western as frontier combat, the spy film as covert conflict. Genres that strip away the soldier's alibis and ask the same questions without the cover of patriotism.
The war film is not really about war. It is about us—about the human soul under pressure, about the questions we ask when everything is at stake.
What would I do? What is worth dying for? What would I become?
This book does not pretend to have easy answers. What it offers instead is a map of the terrain—a guide to the reasons we watch, from the noblest to the most uncomfortable. It will not resolve the paradox of loving stories about what we hate. It will, if it succeeds, help you live inside it more thoughtfully.
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Paperback. Condición: new. Paperback. Why do we love watching what we hate? War is the worst thing humans do to each other: trauma manufactured at industrial scale, the collapse of every civilising impulse into organised butchery. Yet we queue up for the latest war film. We buy the popcorn. We settle into our seats as the screen fills with thunder and screams. We call it entertainment. This book is for everyone who has ever watched a war film and felt that strange mixture of horror and fascination, of pity and thrill. It is for those who have wondered what it says about them that they cannot look away. From the beaches of Saving Private Ryan to the jungles of Apocalypse Now, from the moral certainties of The Sands of Iwo Jima to the bitter disillusionment of Platoon, from the claustrophobic depths of Das Boot to the shattered homecomings of The Best Years of Our Lives-this book explores not just the films themselves but the audience who watches them. What does our appetite for cinematic combat reveal about who we are? Drawing on neuroscience, narrative theory, the psychology of fear, and the ethics of spectatorship, The Good Fight examines why we watch war films, who we follow into battle, and what the genre's evolution tells us about the nations that made them. It walks through the landscapes of combat-the beach, the jungle, the city, the sky and sea-and confronts the uncomfortable questions: the aesthetics of violence, the absence of women, the aftermath that never ends. Finally, it looks beyond the battlefield to the war film's secret cousins: the gangster film as urban warfare, the Western as frontier combat, the spy film as covert conflict. Genres that strip away the soldier's alibis and ask the same questions without the cover of patriotism. The war film is not really about war. It is about us-about the human soul under pressure, about the questions we ask when everything is at stake. What would I do? What is worth dying for? What would I become? This book does not pretend to have easy answers. What it offers instead is a map of the terrain-a guide to the reasons we watch, from the noblest to the most uncomfortable. It will not resolve the paradox of loving stories about what we hate. It will, if it succeeds, help you live inside it more thoughtfully. This item is printed on demand. Shipping may be from our UK warehouse or from our Australian or US warehouses, depending on stock availability. Nº de ref. del artículo: 9798195648312
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