War Pop - The War on Terror in Pop Culture Podcast Por Laura Herges arte de portada

War Pop - The War on Terror in Pop Culture

War Pop - The War on Terror in Pop Culture

De: Laura Herges
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How has America's longest war influenced pop culture? We look at a different pop cultural product each episode - film, music, literature and more. Did "American Sniper" change how we think about the Iraq War? Is the "American Idiot" album more relevant than ever? This and more in War Pop - the War on Terror in Pop Culture.Laura Herges Ciencias Sociales
Episodios
  • Soldier Memoirs: Why do so many have the same plot? (Interview with Dr. Deborah De Muijnck (University of Gießen))
    Nov 5 2025

    This is the full interview with Dr. Deborah de Muijnck (University of Gießen), my first guest on this podcast. We talked about the typical structure of soldier memoirs, trauma and PTSD in combat, and how we shape our own life story with so-called "cultural models of narrative identity."

    If you want to learn more about Deborah's projects, you can follow her on Instagram (@deborahdemu) or on her website: www.uni-giessen.de/en/faculties/ggkgcsc/about-us/docs/research-profiles/team-profiles/demuijcnk


    00:00 - 10:54: Introduction: How did Deborah find her research topic?

    10:55 - 13:29: No female soldier memoirs?

    13:30 - 16:39: The corpus for Deborah's project

    16:40 - 23:57: The 5 models of soldier autobiographies

    23:58 - 31:14: Why do they all follow the same structures?

    31:15 - 40:50: The portrayal of the enemy and techniques to justify actions in combat

    40:51 - 48:47: The portrayal of PTSD in books and films

    48:48 - 54:29: Why one memoir wasn't included

    54:30 - 59:56: Which model is the most interesting?

    59:57 - 01:08:50: Deborah's book and her next projects

    01:08:51 - 01:11:48: Mental health in academia & outro

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    1 h y 12 m
  • American Sniper/American Liar? The Story Behind the Most Successful War Movie of All Time
    Nov 3 2025

    American Sniper (2014) made half a billion dollars at the box office - more than all the other films about the War on Terror that came before combined. But the story this film is based upon paints a quite different picture of Chris Kyle, the most lethal sniper in American history. How did a film turn a controversial person into the ideal war hero? And how do we critically reflect on the genre of soldier autobiographies as a whole?

    A special thank you to Dr. Deborah de Muijnck (University of Gießen), who was my first ever guest on this new podcast. If you want to learn more about Deborah's projects, you can follow her on Instagram (@deborahdemu) or on her website: www.uni-giessen.de/en/faculties/ggkgcsc/about-us/docs/research-profiles/team-profiles/demuijcnk

    00:00 - 04:05: Intro

    04:06 - 09:24: Religion and Othering

    09:25 - 13:14: How do soldiers justify their actions in war?

    13:15 - 17:27: The lie about weapons of mass destruction - can we actually believe soldiers' memoirs?

    17:28 - 18:55: After Iraq: Chris Kyle becomes a celebrity and dies a tragic death

    18:56 - 22:56: The typical structure of soldier memoirs

    22:57 - 26:27: The structure of American Sniper - the autobiography

    26:28 - 33:27: Why do soldier memoirs follow the same structures?

    33:28 - 35:53: American Sniper - a controversial bestseller

    35:53 - 39:29: Book vs film: two very different Chris Kyles

    39:30 - 42:30: Conclusion: How American Sniper influences our memory of the Iraq War

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    43 m
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