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Heroic failure
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Heroic failure describes a person or group failing to accomplish their goal, but somehow gaining the moral upper hand or becoming ennobled in the attempt.
Examples[edit]
A famous case in Wikipedia:Classical Antiquity is King Wikipedia:Leonidas of Wikipedia:Sparta in the Wikipedia:battle of Thermopylae, where Leonidas and his men were defeated and killed, but still remain an enduring model of heroism.
The Wikipedia:Battle of Lake Borgne is considered by many Americans to be a heroic failure. The Americans, vastly outnumbered, fought a large British assault on their five Wikipedia:gunboats, ultimately failing to achieve their objective but not before inflicting considerable damage on the British vessels and crews. U.S. commander Wikipedia:Thomas ap Catesby Jones was later decorated for his bravery during the defense of his squadron.
Some heroic failures are reckoned to have acted as a catalyst for a bigger war, in which the losers' aims were finally achieved. Such were for example Wikipedia:John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry, which helped to spark off the US Civil War, ending with the abolition of slavery which was Brown's aim. A similar role in Irish history is given to the Wikipedia:Easter Rebellion, which itself failed but helped touch off the eventually successful Wikipedia:Irish War of Independence.
The fierce defence of the 1849 Roman Republic by Wikipedia:Mazzini and Wikipedia:Garibaldi was militarily hopeless but created a heroic myth which eventually facilitated the successful Wikipedia:Unification of Italy, eleven years later.
The battle of Wikipedia:Alamo which was lost by Texas forces became the focus of a heroic myth in American history. A similar role was given to the battle of Wikipedia:Tel Hai in Wikipedia:Zionist-Wikipedia:Israeli myth.
The Jewish rebels who embarked on the Wikipedia:Warsaw Ghetto Uprising did not expect a victory over the manifestly overwhelming Nazi forces, but rather aimed from the start at a Heroic failure.
The film Casablanca mentions two heroic failures to develop the Wikipedia:Humphrey Bogart character Rick Blaine.
Captain Louis Renault: Oh, laugh if you will, but I happen to know your record. Let me point out just two items. In 1935 you ran guns to Ethiopia. In 1936, you fought in Spain on the Loyalist side.[1]
The first reference is to the Wikipedia:Second Italo-Abyssinian War. In September 1935 Wikipedia:Italy invaded Ethiopia. Ethiopia lost, but opponents of Wikipedia:colonialism and Wikipedia:fascism supported their cause. The second reference describes the Wikipedia:Spanish Civil War in which rebels led by Wikipedia:Francisco Franco gained control of the country. "The Loyalist side" refers to supporters of the losing republic. Thus Rick has fought for the causes of freedom and democracy and earned an admirable (although losing) record.
Similarly, while the Nationalist Chinese lost Shanghai (and many of their best troops) to the Japanese in the Wikipedia:Battle of Shanghai, the heroic stand by the Chinese showed the world (and the rest of China) that Chiang-Kai-shek's government was making a strong stand against Imperial Japan. Despite being a serious defeat, the Battle of Shanghai was a high mark for Chinese nationalism.
Though the Confederate forces of Wikipedia:Robert E. Lee lost the Civil War, much of the Southern United States still widely regards Lee as an icon of Southern heroism and gallantry. The Wikipedia:Lost Cause school of Civil War historiography portrays the Confederacy as heroic and yet doomed to defeat due to the superior resources of the Union.
A similar term, "successful failure", was used to describe the fate of Wikipedia:Apollo 13, a mission that failed to land on the Moon due to an equipment failure, and yet resulted in the survival and successful return of the astronauts involved despite difficult circumstances. The Wikipedia:Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition in the early 20th century was another such example; having set out to cross Wikipedia:Antarctica on foot, their ship became stuck in Antarctic ice for 22 months. Due to the heroism of expedition leader Wikipedia:Ernest Shackleton and five crew members, who sailed 1500km in a small boat in search of help, not a single life was lost.
Heroic failures may be celebrated in a humorous light and some cultures have a wry respect for those who persevere at a task despite their lack of skill. Examples of this category include:
- Wikipedia:Florence Foster Jenkins
- Wikipedia:William Topaz McGonagall
- Wikipedia:Ed Wood
- Wikipedia:Eddie 'the Eagle' Edwards
Wikipedia:The Book of Heroic Failures by Wikipedia:Stephen Pile is dedicated to this lighter side of the subject. The Nobility of Failure by Wikipedia:Ivan Morris analyzes the significance of heroic failure in Japanese culture through historic case studies, such as Wikipedia:Minamoto no Yoshitsune, Wikipedia:Saigo Takamori and the Wikipedia:kamikaze of World War II (WP).
See also[edit]
- Wikipedia:Battle of attrition
- Wikipedia:Mexican standoff
- Wikipedia:Moral victory
- Wikipedia:No-win situation
- Wikipedia:Pyrrhic victory
- Wikipedia:Win-win situation
- Wikipedia:Winner's curse
Specific:
- Dunkirk evacuation
- Wikipedia:Battle of Persian Gate
- Wikipedia:Battle of the Alamo
- Wikipedia:Battle of Lake Borgne
References[edit]
- ↑ http://www.imsdb.com/scripts/Casablanca.pdf Casablanca script on imsdb.com; accessed 2007-03-01