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New Book on Hollywood and the Fighting Sullivans

AmateisGal

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One of the perks of my job is getting to look through university press catalogs for upcoming and new book releases. I hit the jackpot today with this one from the University Press of Kansas.

sullivan_zpskg74kon7.jpg


The Fighting Sullivans: How Hollywood and the Military Make Heroes by Bruce Kuklick.

"In November of 1942, the five Sullivan brothers from Waterloo, Iowa, were killed when a Japanese torpedo sank their ship during the most ferocious naval engagement fought in the South Pacific. The family's loss, the most extraordinary for the United States in its military history, was immortalized—and valorized—in the 1944 film The Fighting Sullivans. This book tells the story of how calamity, with the help of Hollywood and the wartime publicity machine, transformed a family of marginal and disreputable young men, intensely disliked in their hometown, into heroes.

The Sullivan boys joined the armed forces after Pearl Harbor, and the US Navy accepted that they would all serve on one ship, the light cruiser USS Juneau. The five brothers gave the navy great publicity, but when the ship went down and survivors were not rescued, the service faced a serious problem. The Fighting Sullivans examines the campaign that followed, as the navy and its partners in Hollywood turned a tragedy of errors into a public relations victory. Bruce Kuklick shows how the myth of the Sullivan family was created using bits and pieces of real events, but with twists that turned the boys into superhumans and their beleaguered parents into self-sacrificing patriots. He explores the close relationship between Hollywood studios and the military, which aimed to boost morale and support for the war.

A study in mythmaking, The Fighting Sullivans offers a behind-the-scenes look at the manufacture of heroes in twentieth-century wartime America."


 

AmateisGal

I'll Lock Up
Messages
6,126
Location
Nebraska
Kuklick is an excellent social historian -- his book on the rise and fall of Shibe Park in Philadelphia is absolutely fascinating. Good to see he's still working.

I don't know anything about him, so I'm glad to read your recommendation, Lizzie. This looks like a terrific read.
 

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