Survival Psychology in Kevin Powers’ The Yellow Birds

M. Ikbal M. Alosman, Raihanah M. M.

Abstract


After experiencing the American war in Iraq as a machine gunner in the U.S. Army, Kevin Powers deliberates on war and the risks surrounding the lives of all those involved in his debut novel, The Yellow Birds. This paper aims to uncover the survival psychology that underlies the behaviour of the two main characters in the novel, Private John Bartle and Private Daniel Murphy as well as other minor characters. Survival psychology expounds unpredictable and threatening situations where people’s lives are at stake. They either choose to fight, flight or freeze in reaction to these horrible experiences, that is, they either take action, surrender or eventually die. In the context of war, soldiers frequently face such deadly situations. The reactions of the characters to the circumstances of war and their success and/or failure to cope with its dangers are indicative of their survival mechanism. The novel is examined according to the three major periods of impact in survival psychology, specifically, pre-impact, impact and post-impact periods. Bartle overcomes the psychological consequences of his war experience years after leaving the army, but Murphy loses his faculties in the chasms of war and consequently dies. The psychological survival of those who overcome these risks physically is not guaranteed. Such terrifying experiences of death may make these people vulnerable and exposed to psychological repercussions such as psychosis.


Keywords


survival psychology; psychoanalysis; Kevin Powers; The Yellow Birds; war

Full Text:

PDF

References


Alosman, M. I. M., Raihanah, M. M. & Hashim, R. S. (2018a). Differentiation and imperfectionality in John Updike’s Terrorist. 3L: The Southeast Asian Journal of English Language Studies. Vol. 24(2), 58-70.

Alosman, M. I. M., Raihanah, M. M. & Hashim, R. S. (2018b). Architectures of enmity in Andre Dubus III’s The Garden of Last Days. GEMA Online® Journal of Language

Studies. Vol. 18(4), 251-264.

Aten, J. D. (2017). Wired for survival: Understand and harness your body's natural stress response when it counts. Retrieved August 12, 2018 from

https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/heal-and-carry/201706/wired-survival

Beauchamp, S. (2017). The detached literature of remote wars. American Affairs. Vol. 1(3), 184–96.

Bisson, J. I., Cosgrove, S., Lewis, C. & Robert, N. P. (2015). Post-traumatic stress disorder. BMJ (Clinical research ed.). Retrieved December 12, 2018 from

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4663500/

Cairney, J. (2014). The Importance of Being: Observations through Anecdotage. Edinburgh: Luath Press.

Cyrulnik, B. (2011). Resilience: How Your Inner Strength Can Set You Free from The Past. London: Penguin.

Dennis, P. A., Dennis, N. M., Van Voorhees, E. E., Calhoun, P. S., Dennis, M. F. & Beckham, J. C. (2016). Moral transgression during the Vietnam War: a path analysis of

the psychological impact of veterans' involvement in wartime atrocities. Anxiety, Stress, and Coping. Vol. 30(2), 188–201.

Donoho, C. J., Bonanno, G. A., Porter, B., Kearney, L. & Powell, T. M. (2017). A Decade of war: Prospective trajectories of posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms

among deployed US military personnel and the influence of combat exposure, American Journal of Epidemiology. Vol. 186(12), 1310–1318.

Drabek, T. E. (2012). Human System Responses to Disaster: An Inventory of Sociological Findings. New York: Springer Science & Business Media.

Drabek, T. E. (2013). The Human Side of Disaster. New York: CRC Press.

Eggers, D. (2013). 'We tend to look everywhere but the mirror'. The Guardian. Retrieved September 23, 2018 from

https://www.theguardian.com/books/2013/jan/26/dave-eggers-hologram-king-interview

Evers, S. (2012). The Yellow Birds, By Kevin Powers. Independent. Retrieved January 29, 2018 from https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-

entertainment/books/reviews/the-yellow-birds-by-kevin-powers-8160317.html

Felman, S. (1977). To open the question. Yale French Studies, (55/56), 5-10.

Fletcher, C. V. & Lovejoy, J. (2018) Natural Disasters and Risk Communication: Implications of the Cascadia Subduction Zone Megaquake. London: Lexington Books.

Fogo, W. R. (2017). Understanding Factors Related to Surviving a Disaster: The Survival Attitude Scale. Unpublished PhD dissertation, Bowling Green State University,

Ohio, USA.

Galea, S., Nandi, A. & Vlahov, D. (2005). The Epidemiology of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder after Disasters. Epidemiologic Reviews. Vol. 27(1), 78–91.

Guilbeau, C. (2014). Survival psychology according to John Leach. Retrieved April 17, 2018 from https://udallas.edu/udjs/departments/psychology/2013-2014/survival-

psychology.php

Habben, C. J. (2015). Recent wars and the psychology of men: Beyond the Polemics. Retrieved September 10, 2018 from http://division51.net/clinicians-corner/recent-

wars-and-the-psychology-of-men-beyond-the-polemics/

Kakutani, M. (2012). Soldiering amid hyacinths and horror. New York Times. Retrieved May 19, 2018 from https://www.nytimes.com/2012/09/07/books/the-yellow-

birds-by-kevin-powers.html

Lauretis, T. D. (2008). Freud’s Drive: Psychoanalysis, Literature and Film. New York: Palgrave.

Leach, J. (1994). Survival Psychology. Houndmills: Macmillan.

Leach, J. (2011). Survival Psychology: the won’t to live. The Psychologist. Vol. 24(1), 26-29.

Mann, J. (2017). Mapping memory: Moving between trauma and terror in The Yellow Birds. Critique: Studies in Contemporary Fiction. Vol. 58(4), 340-350.

Mantel, H. (2012). Writers (and rockers) on their books of the year. The Times. Retrieved May 9, 2018 from https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/writers-and-rockers-on-

their-books-of-the-year-vcww2536pds

Marzillier, J. (2007). Special section: What can clinical psychologists learn from reading novels? Clinical Child Psychology and Psychiatry. Vol. 12(3), 393-401.

Marzillier, J. (2013). Eye on fiction: The Yellow Birds. The Psychologist. Vol. 26(5), 348-349.

Mawson, A. R. (2005). Understanding mass panic and other collective responses to threat and disaster. Psychiatry: Interpersonal and biological processes. Vol. 68(2),

-113.

Mitchell, D. (2012). By the Book. New York Times. Retrieved August 28, 2018 from https://www.nytimes.com/2012/10/21/books/review/david-mitchell-by-the-book.html

Nester, T. (2013). Book review: The price of war. Bridgewater Review. Vol. 32(1), 39-40.

Parkin-Gounelas, R. (2001). Literature and Psychoanalysis: Intertextual Readings. New York: Palgrave.

Powers, K. (2012). The Yellow Birds. New York: Little, Brown and Company.

Powers, K. (2013). The Yellow Birds. Kevin Powers, Perth Writers Festival. Retrieved May 7, 2018 from https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VL7IICN4Esg

Precup, A. (2017). Reversing Absence. The Explorations of Memory in The Yellow Birds By Kevin Powers. Studia Ubb Philologia. Vol. LXII (1), 173 – 190.

Rabaté, J-M. (2014). Freud’s textual couch, or the ambassador’s magic carpet. In L. Marcus & A. Mukherjee (Eds.), A Concise Companion to Psychoanalysis, Literature,

And Culture (pp. 103-121). West Sussex: Wiley Blackwell.

Robinson, S. & Bridges, N. (2011). Survival – mind and brain. The Psychologist. Vol. 24(1), 30-33.

Shalev, A., Liberzon, I. & Marmar, C. (2017). Post-traumatic stress disorder. New England Journal of Medicine. Vol. 376(25), 2459–2469.

Sherwood, B. (2009). The Survivors Club: The Secrets and Science that Could Save Your Life. UK: Penguin.

Siebert, A. (2005). The Resiliency Advantage: Master Change, Thrive Under Pressure, and Bounce Back from Setbacks. San Francisco: Berrett-Koehler Publishers.

Tobar, H. (2012). Kevin Powers' haunting Iraq war novel. Los Angeles Times. Retrieved June 7, 2018 from http://articles.latimes.com/2012/nov/10/entertainment/la-

ca-jc-kevin-powers-20121111

Walter, A. (2016). “What it felt like”: Memory and the sensations of war in Vergil’s Aeneid and Kevin Powers’ The Yellow Birds. Thersites. Vol. 4(2016), 275-312.




DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.17576/gema-2020-2001-09

Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


 

 

 

eISSN : 2550-2131

ISSN : 1675-8021