| The Ugly American |
Article Index for The Ugly |
Articles about The Ugly American |
Website Links For Ugly American |
Information AboutThe Ugly American |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT THE UGLY AMERICAN | |
| 1958 novels | |
| american novels | |
| 1963 films | |
| cold war | |
| books about united states foreign relations | |
|
In a series of interlinked short stories, the novel described how the United States was losing the struggle with Communism —what was later to be called ''the battle for hearts and minds''—in Southeast Asia , because of arrogance and failure to understand the local culture. The book takes place in a fictional nation known as Sarkhan. In the novel, a Burmese journalist says "For some reason, the people I meet in my country are not the same as the ones I knew in the United States. A mysterious change seems to come over Americans when they go to a foreign land. They isolate themselves socially. They live pretentiously. They're loud and ostentatious." The phrase "ugly Americans" came to be applied to Americans behaving in this way. Ironically, the "ugly American" of the book title actually referred to one of the heroes, a plain-looking engineer named Homer Atkins, who lives with the local people, comes to understand their needs, and gives genuinely useful assistance with small-scale projects such the development of a simple bicycle-powered water pump. It is argued in the book that the communists were successful because they practiced tactics similar to Atkins'. Another of the book's heroes, Colonel Hillandale, appears to have been modelled on the real-life Air Force Lieutenant General Edward Lansdale , an expert in counter-guerrilla operations. 1963 FILM The book was made into a 1963 film starring Marlon Brando as Harrison Carter MacWhite. Critics mostly agree that film is uneven and the book's message is not conveyed clearly. The film was directed by George Englund . |
|
|