Pain Is Weakness Leaving the Body Pain Is Weakness Leaving the Body

Pain Is Weakness Leaving the Body

    • 1.0 • 1 Rating
    • $19.99

    • $19.99

Publisher Description

An honest reckoning with the war on terror, masculinity, and the violence of American hegemony abroad, at home, and on the psyche, from a veteran whose convictions came undone

When Lyle Jeremy Rubin first arrived at Marine Officer Candidates School, he was convinced that the “war on terror” was necessary to national security. He also subscribed to a strict code of manhood that military service conjured and perpetuated. Then he began to train and his worldview shattered. Honorably discharged five years later, Rubin returned to the United States with none of his beliefs, about himself or his country, intact. 
In Pain Is Weakness Leaving the Body, Rubin narrates his own undoing, the profound disillusionment that took hold of him on bases in the U.S. and Afghanistan. He both examines his own failings as a participant in a prescribed masculinity and the failings of American empire, examining the racialized and class hierarchies and culture of conquest that constitute the machinery of U.S. imperialism. The result is a searing analysis and the story of one man’s personal and political conversion, told in beautiful prose by an essayist, historian, and veteran transformed. 

GENRE
Biographies & Memoirs
NARRATOR
GMB
Garrett Michael Brown
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
10:44
hr min
RELEASED
2022
November 1
PUBLISHER
Hachette Audio
SIZE
548.8
MB

Customer Reviews

hebland ,

A Firsthand Review

As one of Lyle’s Marines in OEF, his depiction is greatly exaggerated, and ignores the reality of our specific mission and commander’s intent in Helmand Province. Each individual has their unique biases from how and where they were raised and through this their own perceptions of the experiences that they endure. This does not make it fact, or the majorities perception. This book was clearly an individual’s feelings, fed by his opposition to the status quo. A status he clearly outlines provided him with many opportunities none of us he “led” ever had. Yet he chooses to present this in the most negative manner.