Grand Narratives and Gendered Wars and Societies

IF 0.2 3区 历史学 Q2 HISTORY
K. D. Vuic
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Abstract

The study of twentieth century US military history has changed dramatically in the last forty years, in no small measure due to the increasing number of historians who approach the field through a focus on war and society and gender history. Once considered ‘ new ’ , these fields are now older than many practising historians and have become common specialisations among them. Whether or not the study of wars, societies, and gender have dismantled any perceived standard narrative of military history, however, might depend on whom you ask. This essay examines how the intertwined fields of war and society and gender history have challenged conventional military history narratives at the individual, institutional, and structural levels. While drawing primarily on recent works about the twentieth century United States, many of the topics, methods, and questions of these approaches also characterise the history of other time periods and other regions of the world. 1 Historians of wars and societies and of gender argue that it is impossible to separate the experiences and institutions of military and wartime service, or even the framing and conduct of war itself, from the societies that mobilise and deploy armed forces. Military histories, they insist, are also histories of gender, of race, class, religion, sex, and region. Nothing about militaries or wars is univer-sal or natural; no decision is made free of social and cultural context. These historians understand the relationship between societies, militaries, and conflict as determinative, inseparable, and mutually constructive. In the context of the United States in particular, they see military and wartime needs as fundamental to all foreign and domestic policies. War and society and gender history, as dedicated historical fields, emerged from the same historiographical developments and are in many ways inseparable. Both
宏大叙事与性别战争和社会
在过去的四十年里,对二十世纪美国军事史的研究发生了巨大的变化,这在很大程度上是因为越来越多的历史学家通过关注战争、社会和性别史来研究这一领域。这些领域曾经被认为是“新的”,现在比许多执业历史学家都要古老,并已成为他们之间的共同专业。然而,对战争、社会和性别的研究是否打破了任何公认的军事历史标准叙事,可能取决于你问谁。本文探讨了战争、社会和性别历史交织在一起的领域如何在个人、制度和结构层面挑战传统的军事历史叙事。虽然主要借鉴了20世纪美国的最新作品,但这些方法的许多主题、方法和问题也反映了世界其他时间段和其他地区的历史。1战争、社会和性别历史学家认为,不可能将军事和战时服务的经历和制度,甚至战争本身的框架和行为,与动员和部署武装部队的社会分开。他们坚持认为,军事史也是性别、种族、阶级、宗教、性别和地区的历史。任何关于军事或战争的事情都不是单方面的或自然的;任何决定都离不开社会和文化背景。这些历史学家将社会、军事和冲突之间的关系理解为决定性的、不可分割的、相互建设性的。特别是在美国的背景下,他们认为军事和战时需求是所有外交和国内政策的根本。战争、社会和性别史作为专门的历史领域,是在同一历史发展中产生的,在许多方面是不可分割的。二者都
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来源期刊
War & Society
War & Society Multiple-
CiteScore
0.50
自引率
25.00%
发文量
17
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