PURPLE
HEARTS
Nina Berman
Softbound,
8" x 8" 96 pages
40 color illustrations
2004, Trolley
Essays by Verlyn Klinkenborg and Tim Origer
From the Publisher:
A Purple Heart is the token honor
given to soldiers wounded in combat. It makes them heroes. It
is also the title that Nina Berman has given to her photographs
of American soldiers gravely injured in the Iraq war, who have
returned home to face life away from the waving flags and heroic
send-offs. The images are accompanied by first person interviews
with the young soldiers who discuss their lives, reasons for enlisting,
experiences in Iraq and their prospects as disabled veterans,
some of them blind, some without limbs, others brain damaged and
wheel-chair bound.
The words and photos make for a complex portrait
of American youth, their values, their dreams, the lack of opportunity
facing them upon high school graduation, and the myths of warfare
which informed their decisions to join.
One soldier explained that he always wanted to
be a hero and thought the military would be fun. He never imagined
an RPG attack in Fallujah would leave him a cripple unable to
care for a wife and two children. Another described calling the
recruiting station after he saw an MTV-style Army commercial on
TV. An immigrant from Pakistan, he was given his citizenship following
his injury, a fair trade in his mind, a leg for an American passport.
Yet another soldier left a crime, drug ridden neighborhood in
Alabama, only to return 100 percent disabled back where he started
but now bedridden.
The photographs are accompanied by essays from
Verlyn Klinkenborg, an author and editorial writer for the New
York Times, and Tim Origer, a Vietnam veteran and former
Marine who fought in the Tet offensive. He came back a 19 year-old
amputee.
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