In Creating GI Jane, Leisa Meyer traces the roots of a cultural anxiety at the core of the American psyche, providing the historical perspective needed to understand the controversies still surrounding the gendered military. Drawing upon a rich array of sources including oral histories, army papers, congressional hearings, cartoons, and editorials, Meyer paints nuanced portraits of the experiences of women soldiers against the backdrop of strife and opportunity during the war years. The book chronicles the efforts of the female WAC administration to counter public controversy by controlling the type of women recruited and regulating service-women's behavior. Reflecting and reinforcing contemporary sexual stereotypes, the WAC administration recruited the most "respectable" white middle-class women, limited the number of women of color, and screened against lesbian enlistments. As Meyer demonstrates, the military establishment also upheld current sex and race occupational segregation, assuring the public that women were in the military to do "women's work" within it, and resisting African-American women's protests against their relegation to menial labor. Yet Creating GI Jane is also the story of how, in spite of a palpable climate of repression, many women effectively carved out spaces and seized opportunities in the early WAC. African-American women and men worked together in demanding civil rights deriving from military service. Lesbians found the military simultaneously dangerous and conducive to community formation during and after the war. In this fresh, provocative analysis, Meyer offers compelling evidence that these struggles had lasting effects on larger civil rights movements that emerged in the postwar years.
Tony Ashworth describes a curious culture of live and let live that evolved between enemies in the trenches of World War 1. It was a culture that was spontaneous, unplanned...
26 F. C. Stanley , The History of the 89th Brigade , 1914-1918 , Daily Post , Liverpool , 1919 , p . ... Aston and L. M. Duggan , The History of the 12th ( Bermondsey ) Battalion , East Surrey Regiment , London , 1936 , The New Armies 123.
Throughout history, innovations in military technology have transformed warfare, which, in turn, affected state formation. This interplay between warfare, military technology, and state formation is the focus of this text.
L'ouvrage présente les résultats du programme de recherches pluridisciplinaires et comparatives, financé par l'ANR de 2007 à 2011, portant sur les « Transformations des guerres : dispositifs privés et publics de gestion de la violence ...