The Spitting Image
The Spitting Image: Myth, Memory and the Legacy of Vietnam is a 1998 book by Vietnam veteran Jeremy Lembcke which attempts to repudiate reports that American soldiers, returning home from the Vietnam War, were spat upon and derided with harsh insults by anti-war protesters. His conclusion was that there was not even a single media report to support the claims. Lembcke concluded that the reported "spitting on soldiers" was a mythical projection of those who felt "spat-upon", and was meant to discredit future antiwar activism.A persistent criticism levelled against those who protested the United States's involvement in the Vietnam War is the complaint that protesters spat upon and otherwise derided returning soldiers, calling them "baby-killers", etc.
Reviews of Jeremy Lembcke's book
A Los Angeles Times book reviewer wrote:Cinematic depiction of veterans' experiences
The notion of soldiers being spat upon was featured in a number of American movies, including the Rambo series. According to the Digital History Project at the University of Houston:
- In First Blood (1982), John Rambo captured the pain of the returning veterans: "It wasn't my war--you asked me, I didn't ask you...and I did what I had to do to win....Then I came back to the world and I see all those maggots at the airport, protesting me, spitting on me, calling me a baby-killer...." [1]
- The 1977 movie Tracks features a fictional anti war activist who spits on his opponents. The film is not known to have any basis in fact.