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Idea občana – válečníka a „moderní“ maskulinní identita: modelová studie z dějin Spojených států

Authors :
Hutečka, Jiří
Hutečka, Jiří
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Only in recent years it became usual to cross (cautiously indeed) borders between gender history and military history, and in Czech historiography particularly, this kind of border-crossing is still virtually non-existent. Although it is not very surprising considering the “state of the art” in both fields here, it must be surprising in any other way, because there is a hardly any more “gendered” human endeavor than warfare – a fact generally acknowledged by theorists and thinkers from Bourdieu to Virginia Woolfe. This article is an effort to present a case study of connection between these two fields. The US Civil War is a great case study for this effort as it was a war of volunteers – most soldiers served in the ranks not because of direct conscription (only low percentage were actual draftees) or because of economic pressures (although that was not uncommon). They mostly served to fulfill what we can call the “citizen-warrior” concept as borrowed by contemporary theorists from ancient republics. The “warrior image” was at the very core of their understanding of their own masculinity, as was widely recognized not only by themselves (various sources as diaries, memoirs and literature are used here), but also by the society at large, and especially by women, who sometimes consciously, sometimes not were putting an immense pressure on men to “be men”. This pressure from home community had, thanks to the local character of regiments in both armies and thanks to the “crowded” character of battlefield, an overwhelming tactical implications – the field of battle became the ultimate expression of Bourdieu’s “masculine space” – outward, official, public, short, dangerous, spectacular. And, thanks to general literacy, a closely watched one indeed. The principle of mutual support and/or control thus played an important part in men’s courage. The “citizen-warrior” principle had yet another important implication – a strategic one. At the end, it led to what is called here a “

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
s. 263-280, application/pdf, Czech
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1100080562
Document Type :
Electronic Resource