Keen On America

America's Most Wounded Generation: Returning Home after World War II

Oct 11, 2025
David Nasaw, a distinguished historian and author of 'The Wounded Generation', delves into the struggles faced by World War II veterans upon their return home. He reframes the narrative of the 'Greatest Generation' to highlight the pain of undiagnosed PTSD and familial breakdowns. Nasaw draws attention to the unequal treatment of Black veterans under the GI Bill and the emotional scars left by both combat experiences and societal discrimination. He also explores how writers like Salinger processed their trauma through fiction, revealing the long-lasting impacts of war.
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INSIGHT

Homecoming Was The Hidden Story

  • David Nasaw reframes Tom Brokaw's 'Greatest Generation' by focusing on veterans' painful homecomings.
  • He argues silence after the war was often undiagnosed trauma, not stoic heroism.
INSIGHT

War's Aftershocks Shattered Civilian Life

  • Nasaw documents postwar spikes in divorce, lynchings, alcoholism and homelessness among veterans.
  • These social ruptures reflect widespread, untreated wartime trauma and societal strain.
INSIGHT

Duration Multiplied The Trauma

  • WWII was longer and exposed more Americans to sustained combat than WWI, increasing trauma risk.
  • Average service nearly tripled and overseas deployment rose to 75%, worsening mental and physical strain.
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