These are the sources and citations used to research True War Story. This bibliography was generated on Cite This For Me on
In-text: (Brickell, 2005)
Your Bibliography: Brickell, C., 2005. Masculinities, Performativity, and Subversion. Men and Masculinities, 8(1), pp.24-43.
In-text: (Butler, 2006)
Your Bibliography: Butler, J., 2006. Gender Trouble. 1st ed. London: Routledge.
In-text: (Calloway, 1995)
Your Bibliography: Calloway, C., 1995. “How to Tell a True War Story”: Metafiction inThe Things They Carried. Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction, 36(4), pp.249-257.
In-text: (Clare, 2009)
Your Bibliography: Clare, S., 2009. Agency, Signification, and Temporality. Hypatia, 24(4), pp.50-62.
In-text: (Fogwill, Caistor and Hopkinson, 2007)
Your Bibliography: Fogwill, R., Caistor, N. and Hopkinson, A., 2007. Malvinas Requiem. London: Serpent's Tail.
In-text: (Gowans and Zalta, 2018)
Your Bibliography: Gowans, C. and Zalta, E., 2018. Moral Relativism. The Stanford Encyclopaedia of Philosophy, [online] (Summer 2018). Available at: <https://plato.stanford.edu/archives/sum2018/entries/moral-relativism> [Accessed 24 January 2019].
In-text: (O'Brien, 2015)
Your Bibliography: O'Brien, T., 2015. The Things They Carried. London: Flamingo.
In-text: (Ransom, 2016)
Your Bibliography: Ransom, J., 2016. Andersonville Diary.
In-text: (Silbergleid, 2009)
Your Bibliography: Silbergleid, R., 2009. Making Things Present: Tim O’Brien’s Autobiographical Metafiction. Contemporary Literature, 50(1), pp.129-155.
In-text: (White, 2000)
Your Bibliography: White, H., 2000. Metahistory: The Historical Imagination in 19th-century Europe. Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins Univ. Press.
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