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Representations and Reproductive Hazards of Agent Orange

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2021

Extract

United States Air Force planes fly across mountains of green forest; behind them, fine white streams of chemical spray fill the sky. The planes fly alone or in formation covering wide swaths of the entire landscape. These images of the herbicide spraying during the United States-Vietnam War are ubiquitous in media material about Agent Orange, the most heavily used of the fifteen herbicides sprayed during the war. This representation of the war does not include guns, grenades, tanks, bombs, or dead bodies. Instead, contemporary documentary filmmakers offer images of airplanes and chemical barrels to provide evidence of another weapon of war, pan dead and leafless forests in an otherwise lush landscape of green, and zero in on children’s deformed bodies to show the lasting environmental and health effects of Agent Orange. In this essay I share preliminary thoughts from my new project on Agent Orange and film in the United States and Vietnam. The bulk of social science writing on Agent Orange has focused on American veterans and their fight to secure benefits, while film scholars have analyzed the Vietnam War in Hollywood movies and television. I investigate documentary film, the transnational activism that generates these films, and the representations of gender, disabilities, bodies, history and culture within them. Here I offer a close reading of two turn-of-the-twenty-first-century documentaries about Agent Orange in Vietnam.

Type
Symposium
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 2011

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References

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I do not know how common it was or is to keep new mothers ignorant of birth defects, but it happened in Vietnam, Germany, and the United States. These cultures shared similar views: That malformations and retardation were inherited from the parents, were punishment for illicit or other misbehavior, and that birth defects were a family shame. Spencer, S. M., “The Untold Story of the Thalidomide Babies,” Saturday Evening Post 235 (1962): 25; Sjostrom, H. and Nilsson, R., Thalidomide and the Power of the Drug Companies (Middlesex, England: Penguin Books, 1972); Insight Team of The Sunday Times of London, Suffer the Children: The Story of Thalidomide (New York: Viking Press, 1979); see Reagan, , supra note 10; Beaton, M. J., The Road to Autonomy (Enumclaw, Wash.: Pleasant Word, a division of Winepress Publishing, 2003). In the 1950s and 1960s, American doctors routinely advised institutionalizing children born with malformations or intellectual impairment, particularly those born with Down Syndrome. Kugel, R. B. et al., “An Analysis of Reasons for Institutionalizing Children with Mongolism,” Journal of Pediatrics 64, no. 1 (1964): 68–74; Beruhe, M., Life as We Know It: A Father, a Family, and an Exceptional Child (New York: Vintage Books, a division of Random House, 1998): 27–30.Google Scholar
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This is not to say that all parents accepted their “deformed” children or resisted institutionalization. Many parents institutionalized them if they could; others abandoned them to hospitals or orphanages. In Vietnam, too, children born with congenital deformities are left in hospitals, tended to, and educated there, as shown in Agent Orange: A Personal Requiem, supra note 9.Google Scholar
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I have seen this reaction with students in other classes when they watched a documentary that had a clear point of view. Perhaps they expect a PBS American Experience type of documentary that, although it has a perspective, appears to be objective and dispassionate.Google Scholar
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