SBAND Seminar Materials 2013 Free Ethics: Echoes of War The Combat Veteran | Page 5
Like
Homer’s
Odyssey,
twentieth
century
literature
and
cinema
have
also
explored
the
connection
between
combat
trauma
and
criminal
behavior.
After
World
War
I,
novels
and
plays
such
as
What
Price
Glory?,
They
Put
a
Gun
in
My
Hand,
All
Quiet
on
the
Western
Front,
and
The
Road
Back
described
this
link.
Vietnam-?related
literature
and
cinema,
such
as
Taxi
Driver,
The
Deer
Hunter,
Apocalypse
Now,
Full
Metal
Jacket,
First
Blood,
Platoon,
and
Born
on
the
4th
of
July
have
done
the
same.
The
Hurt
Locker,
Harsh
Times,
and
Restrepo
are
modern
films
that
face
combat
trauma
and
adjustment
disorders
head
on
in
very
stark,
gritty
terms.
B. PTSD’s
Many
Names
The
affliction
we
now
call
PTSD
has
gone
by
many
names
over
the
centuries.
The
cluster
of
symptoms
was
first
medically
diagnosed
in
Europe.
It
was
referred
to
as
“nostalgia”
among
Swiss
soldiers
in
1678.
German
doctors
during
that
period
called
the
condition
Heimweh,
while
the
French
called
it
maladie
du
pays—both
meant
“homesickness.”
The
Spanish
called
it
estar
roto,
meaning
“to
be
broken.”6
Civil
War-?era
Americans
gave
PTSD
poetic
names
like
“soldier’s
heart”
and
“irritable
heart.”
Out
of
the
horrors
of
World
War
I,
came
“shell
shock.”
World
War
II
and
Korea
ushered
in
the
more
clinical
term,
“combat
fatigue.”7
World
War
II
correspondent
and
artist,
Tom
Lea,
first
coined
the
term
“thousand
yard
stare”
with
his
painting
that
was
actually
entitled
“that
2,000
yard
stare,”
depicting
a
shell-?shocked
Marine
during
fighting
on
Peleliu
in
the
South
Pacific.
The
term
has
become
part
of
our
cultural
lexicon
and
is
often
used
synonymously
with
PTSD:8
6 7
EDWARD
TICK,
WAR
AND
THE
SOUL:
HEALING
OUR
NATION’S
VETERANS
FROM
POST-?TRAUMATIC
STRESS
DISORDER
99
(2005).
Id.
8
Tom
Lea,
That
2,000
Yard
Stare,
Oil
on
Canvas,
U.S.
Army
Center
for
Military
History,
Washington,
D.C.
(1944).
5