Ethnography at the War Century's End
In: Journal of Contemporary Ethnography (Special issue,'Ethnography: Reflections at the Century's End'), 28 (6): pp.610-619, 1999
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In: Journal of Contemporary Ethnography (Special issue,'Ethnography: Reflections at the Century's End'), 28 (6): pp.610-619, 1999
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In: Public Culture, Band 9, Heft 2, S. 135-159
ISSN: 1527-8018
In: Public Culture 1997, 9: 135-159
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In: Ruth Behar and Deborah Gordon, eds., Women Writing Culture/Culture Writing Women, Berkeley: University of California Press, 1995
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In: Women, Culture, and Development, S. 396-400
In: Bulletin of concerned Asian scholars, Band 18, Heft 2, S. 21-27
In: A Companion to the Anthropology of Politics, S. 318-331
In: Anthropologies of American Medicine: Culture, Power, and Practice Ser v. 4
6. The Political Capital of War Wounds7. Iraqis' Cancer Itineraries: War, Medical Travel, and Therapeutic Geographies; 8. War and Its Consequences for Cancer Trends and Services in Iraq; Part III. United States; 9. Imagining Military Suicide; 10. Afterwar Work for Life; 11. "It's Not Okay": War's Toll on Health Brought Home to Communities and Environments; Appendix: The Body Count; About the Editors; About the Contributors; Index
In: American anthropologist: AA
ISSN: 1548-1433
AbstractThis article lays out the work of Costs of War, a project of scholars creating public‐facing knowledge toward the goal of challenging US militarism. Emerging from literature that critiques US imperial violence and deconstructs the commonplace understandings that support it, our efforts identify and confront pillars of belief about war that are shaped by the powerful military‐industrial complex and rooted in an underlying devaluation of the lives of Muslims, people of color, women, and oppressed groups who bear the brunt of militarization both at home and abroad. We use our research and associated website (costsofwar.org) to reach out to journalists, editors, Congress, policymakers, civic groups, social movements, and the US public. In contesting the soundbites about the post‐9/11 wars that allow these wars to be seen as inevitable and to continue uncontested, we hope to help avert the next war championed by those least likely to live with the horrific and decades‐long consequences. We describe our approach, its successes, and its stumbling blocks in hope of offering insights for scholars in the social sciences who wish to use their research in service of activist goals and social justice movements, antiwar and beyond.
In: Watson Institute for International Studies Research Paper No. 2014-22
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Working paper
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Working paper
In: American Ethnologist, 2007, 34 (2): pp. 322-328
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In: Armed forces & society: official journal of the Inter-University Seminar on Armed Forces and Society : an interdisciplinary journal, Band 30, Heft 4, S. 687-689
ISSN: 0095-327X
In: The Nation, Oct. 14, 2002
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Breaking Ranks brings a new and deeply personal perspective to the war in Iraq by looking into the lives of six veterans who turned against the war they helped to fight. Based on extensive interviews with each of the six, the book relates why they enlisted, their experiences in training and in early missions, their tours of combat, and what has happened to them since returning home. The compelling stories of this diverse cross section of the military recount how each journey to Iraq began with the sincere desire to do good. Matthew Gutmann and Catherine Anne Lutz show how each individual's experiences led to new moral and political understandings and ultimately to opposing the war.