<p><strong>"<em>Gendering Military Sacrifice</em> provides rigorous and analytically rich insights into all the work that goes into making the death of soldiers politically intelligible and meaningful. Deftly weaving together practices of meaning making around military sacrifice, this volume has much to tell readers about the specific narratives and practices deployed in different European countries and how military sacrifice can be read as an increasingly globalised phenomenon."</strong><em>-- Victoria Basham, Cardiff University, UK</em></p><p><strong>"This exciting volume offers original research regarding the meaning assigned to war deaths. The comparative analysis brings forth silences and absences within and across national divides in ways hardly ever done before, and opens windows to new understandings of contemporary war-making. For those among us looking for alternative voices in these times of war and threats of war, this book is an inspiration."</strong>-- <em>Berit von der Lippe, Norwegian Business School, Norway</em></p><p><strong>"Cecilia Åse, Maria Wendt and their smart co-authors have pulled back the curtain on the costs of the long Afghanistan war. They shine a feminist spotlight on the gendered rituals governments craft to justify their failed militarized policies."</strong>-- <em>Cynthia Enloe, author of </em>The Big Push: Exposing and Challenging Persistent Patriarchy</p><p><strong>"There are studies on the military as a gendered institution, and there are studies on how societies commemorate their dead soldiers. This volume combines these perspectives in an original and very stimulating way. In analysing how ISAF casualties were commemorated and legitimated, the authors develop a concise and critical assessment of contemporary wars and national constructions of heroes, victims and sacrifices."</strong>-- <em>Nina Leonhard, Bundeswehr Center of Military History and Social Sciences, Germany</em></p>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Cecilia Åse is Professor of Gender Studies at Stockholm University, Sweden.
Maria Wendt is Associate Professor and Senior Lecturer in Political Science at Stockholm University, Sweden.