Thomas Gustafson |
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At this small little town, 3,500 people, they have a 4th of July parade, and probably in my sophomore year in high school, in this 4th of July parade – I think I’ve shown you photos of it, with me dressed up as a revolutionary person, riding my horse as sort of a Western cowboy – at the very end of the parade, some high school students carried a coffin, to symbolize people who had died during the Vietnam War. When they played the Star-Spangled Banner at the start of the 4th of July celebrations, they sat down in protest against it. My baseball coach, who’s also the fire chief, who had a nephew serving in Vietnam, went and picked them up, lifted them up. Protest against the Vietnam War became part of a newspaper article about how the 4th of July parade – this very nostalgic, fun 4th of July parade – got disrupted by this Vietnam War protest.
Object Description
Profile of | Thomas Gustafson |
Title | Thomas Gustafson: Growing Up in America During the Vietnam War |
Profile bio | Our group had the pleasure and honor of interviewing USC Associate Professor of English, American Studies, and Ethnicity Thomas Gustafson. Gustafson was approximately 13 years old and coming of age during the height of the American War in Vietnam. He grew up in a conservative, mostly White suburbia in New Jersey, but attended a much more liberal high school during the years he began to form his own opinions about the war. He went on to attend Yale University to pursue a B.A. in English and history, and pursued a PH.D. in English at Stanford University. Today he focuses on political discourse in language, politics of language, and literature of the American West. Gustafson attributes his choice to pursue politics and history to his upbringing in the highly politically active years of the Vietnam War. |
Profiler bio | The profilers for this project are Kathleen Moore, Natalia Saucedo, and TJ Darcy. Kathleen grew up in Sacramento, California and attended USC to pursue a degree in business to be completed in 2018.; Natalia Saucedo is a political science major originating from Culver City, CA and will be graduating in 2019.; TJ Darcy grew up in Valley Stream, New York and attended USC to pursue a degree in computer science major with an emphasis in games. He will be graduating in spring 2016. |
Subject | Profile |
Profiled by | Moore, Kathleen; Darcy, TJ; Saucedo, Natalia |
Profile date | 2016-04-07 |
Geographic subject (city or populated place) | Elizabeth; New Haven; Palo Alto |
Geographic subject (county) | Union; New Haven; Santa Clara |
Geographic subject (state) | New Jersey; Connecticut; California |
Geographic subject (country) | USA |
Coverage date | 1953 |
Publisher (of the original version) | http://anotherwarmemorial.com/thomas-gustafson-growing-up-in-america-during-the-vietnam-war/ |
Type |
images video |
Format | 1 image; 11 video files (00:11:16); 11 transcripts |
Language | English |
Contributing entity | University of Southern California |
Part of collection | An Other War Memorial -- Memories of the American War in Viet Nam |
Filename | gustafsonthomas |
Description
Profile of | Thomas Gustafson |
Title | Interview Transcription |
Format | 1 transcript, 1p. |
Filename | gustafsonthomas-vid3_tr3.pdf |
Full text | At this small little town, 3,500 people, they have a 4th of July parade, and probably in my sophomore year in high school, in this 4th of July parade – I think I’ve shown you photos of it, with me dressed up as a revolutionary person, riding my horse as sort of a Western cowboy – at the very end of the parade, some high school students carried a coffin, to symbolize people who had died during the Vietnam War. When they played the Star-Spangled Banner at the start of the 4th of July celebrations, they sat down in protest against it. My baseball coach, who’s also the fire chief, who had a nephew serving in Vietnam, went and picked them up, lifted them up. Protest against the Vietnam War became part of a newspaper article about how the 4th of July parade – this very nostalgic, fun 4th of July parade – got disrupted by this Vietnam War protest. |
Archival file | Volume3/gustafsonthomas-vid3_tr3.pdf |