
Citizenship Rites: Feminist Soldiers and Feminist Antimilitarists
Author(s): Ilene Feinman (Author)
- Publisher: New York University Press
- Publication Date: 1 Jan. 2000
- Language: English
- Print length: 304 pages
- ISBN-10: 0814726887
- ISBN-13: 9780814726884
Book Description
In the United States, the question of women in the armed services has been continuously and hotly debated. Among feminists, two fundamentally differing views of women in the military have developed. Feminist antimilitarists tell us that militarism and patriarchy have together pressed women into second class citizenship. Meanwhile, feminist soldiers and their advocates regard martial service as women’s right and responsibility and the ticket to first class citizenship.
Citizenship Rites investigates what is at stake for women in these debates. Exploring the perspectives of both feminist antimilitarists and feminist soldiers, Ilene Feinman situates the current combat controversy within the context of the sea change in United States politics since the 1970s-from ERA debates over drafting women to recent representations of military women such as the film GI Jane. Drawing on congressional testimony, court cases, feminist and antiracist political discourse, and antimilitarist activism, Feinman addresses our pressing need for an analysis of women’s increasing inclusion in the armed forces while providing a provocative investigation of what this changing role means for women and society alike.
Editorial Reviews
Review
“Ilene Rose Feinman shows us how feminist theorizing grows out of feminist activist engagement; and then is tested through direct action and refined. The questions she raises hereabout the meanings and practices of citizenship and the impacts of soldiering on democratic lifeare urgent as we move into a new century.”–Cynthia Enloe, author of Maneuvers: The International Politics of Militarizing Women’s Lives
“It is pure polemic. Those already converted will be inspired.”–Gerard J. DeGroot “The Journal of American History”
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