Full Description
After the end of the draft in 1973, the US military increasingly targeted women, particularly Black women, for military enlistment. Military service promised women a chance to transform their lives and demonstrate their worth as citizens. Told through the narratives of US women soldiers and marines deployed to Iraq and Afghanistan—foregrounding women of color and queer women—Gender Is a Weapon recounts how women's gender difference was used strategically for counterinsurgency and the tensions and contradictions evidenced by women's military service.
Through ethnographic and archival research with women soldiers and marines, as well as military and government officials, the book contextualizes women's service in Iraq and Afghanistan against the promises of liberal inclusion unfolding throughout the late twentieth and early twenty-first century. Centered on narratives of Black and Indigenous women, women of color, immigrant women, white women, and queer women, Gender Is a Weapon analyzes the transformations of martial citizenship; the racialized language of cultural difference in the U.S.'s revitalized counterinsurgency doctrine; the gendered performances of women in combat and civilian engagement missions; and ultimately, the irreparable injuries of body and mind with which these women returned home. The epilogue discusses the recent dismantling of DEI in the military and US government more broadly, reflecting on what we can learn from the violent history of military liberal inclusion to help us better understand our contemporary moment. By carefully attending to both the discursive construction and performative enactment of gender in militarized and securitized contexts, the book advances theoretical frames for studying gender in state militaries, militarism, and late liberalism.
Contents
Table of Contents
List of abbreviations
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Counterinsurgent Feminism
Chapter 1: The Freedom to Serve: Citizenship and Belonging in the All-Volunteer Force
Chapter 2: Ghosting Counterinsurgency: Gender and the Racial Terrain of Cultural Difference
Chapter 3: Scenes of Engagement: On the Mimicry of "Women"
Chapter 4: Staging Difference: Gender, Race, and the Revision of American Military Masculinity
Chapter 5: A Reckoning: Injury and Repair in Late Liberalism
Epilogue: The War on Warriors
Bibliogprahy
Notes



