"Robert Burgoyne offers here an essential reckoning with the changing affective contours of war representation in the twenty-first century. Eloquent and probing in equal measure, he invites us to confront the cinema’s emergent grammars of violence in the context of a forever war both intimate and remote, asking what is left-and what is possible-when the collective fiction of redemptive violence no longer coheres." -Jonna Eagle, author of Imperial Affects: Sensational Melodrama and the Attractions of American Cinema "Robert Burgoyne’s perceptive and engaging new volume provides a roadmap to the contemporary war film in light of the changed nature of conflict today. He illuminates how American culture comes to grips with the impact of endless wars and new geopolitical landscapes, showing how traditional narratives surrounding heroism, military technology, and victimhood have broken down. The New American War Film offers a vital new history of war and media today." -Tanine Allison, author of Destructive Sublime: World War II in American Film and Media