The Things They Carried

does the role of shame drive the soldier to acts of hersim or stupidity

does shame drives the soldiers to acts of herosims or stupidity

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Courage and the cult of manhood and shame is the other side of that fine line. There are familiar themes from earlier war novels and stories, but O'Brien turns the concept completely on its head. In "On a Rainy River," he describes how he forced himself into the "courageous" act of going to war through shaming himself by imagining what others would think of him if he did not go. Once in Vietnam, the idea of courage becomes laughable. Everyone jumps at the slightest noise, everyone fears for their life. Macho characters like Curt Lemon seem absurd to O'Brien, because O'Brien believes no one is actually courageous. It is a physical impossibility.