
The Oxford handbook of gender, war, and the Western world since 1600 / edited by Karen Hagemann, Stefan Dudink, and Sonya O. Rose
To date, the history of military and war has focused predominantly on men as historical agents, disregarding gender and its complex interrelationships with war and the military. The Oxford Handbook of Gender, War, and the Western World since 1600 investigates how conceptions of gender have contribut...
Saved in:
Other Authors: | Hagemann, Karen (Author) Dudink, Stefan (Author) Rose, Sonya O. (Author) |
---|---|
Format: | Book |
Language: | English |
Published: | New York ; Oxford : Oxford University Press, [2020] © 2020 |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Table of Contents |
---|
From the Thirty Years War and colonial conquest to the wars of revolution and independence |
War and gender : from the Thirty Years War and colonial conquest to the wars of revolution and independence : an overview Stefan Dudink and Karen Hagemann |
Wars, states and gender in Early Modern European warfare, 1600s-1780s Peter H. Wilson |
War, culture and gender in colonial and revolutionary North America Serena Zabin |
War, gender and society in late colonial and revolutionary Spanish America Catherine Davies |
Gender, slavery, war and violence in and beyond the age of revolution Elizabeth Colwill |
Society, mass warfare and gender in Europe during and after the revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars Alan Forrest |
History and memory of army women and female soldiers, 1770s-1870s Thomas Cardoza and Karen Hagemann |
Citizenship, mass mobilization and masculinity in a transatlantic perspective, 1770s-1870s Stefan Dudink |
Wars of nations and empires |
War and gender : nineteenth-century wars of nations and empires : an overview Stefan Dudink, Karen Hagemann and Mischa Honeck |
Mobilization for war : gendered military cultures in nineteenth-century Western societies Robert A. Nye |
Gender and the wars of nation-building and nation-keeping in the Americas, 1830s-1870s Amy S. Greenberg |
Imperial conquest, violent encounters and changing gender relations in colonial warfare, 1830s-1910s Angela Woollacott |
The "white man" race and imperial war during the long nineteenth century Marilyn Lake |
Changing modes of warfare and the gendering of military medical care, 1850s-1920s Jean H. Quataert |
The age of the world wars |
War and gender : the age of the world wars and its aftermath : an overview Karen Hagemann and Sonya O. Rose |
Mobilization for war : gender, culture and music in the age of world wars Annegret Fauser |
"Total warfare," gender and the "home front" in Europe during the First and Second World Wars Susan R. Grayzel |
Citizenship and gender on the American and Canadian home fronts during the First and Second World Wars Kimberly Jensen |
History and memory of female military service in the age of world wars Karen Hagemann |
Western states, military masculinity and combat in the age of world wars Thomas Kühne |
Colonial soldiers, race and military masculinity during and beyond World War I and II Richard Smith |
Sexuality, sexual violence and the military in the age of the world wars Regina Mühlhäuser |
Gender, peace and the new politics of Humanitarianism in the first half of the twentieth century Glenda Sluga |
Gender, demobilization and the reordering of society after the First and Second World Wars Karen Hagemann |
Gendering the memories of war and Holocaust in Europe and the United States Frank Biess |
From the global Cold War to the conflicts of the post-Cold War era |
War and gender : from the global Cold War to the conflicts of the post-Cold War era : an overview Karen Hagemann and Sonya O. Rose |
Gender, the wars of decolonization and the decline of empires after 1945 Raphaëlle Branche |
Post-1945 Western militaries, female soldiers and gay and lesbian rights Karen Hagemann and D'Ann Campbell |
Conceptualizing sexual violence in post-Cold War global conflicts Dubravka Zarkov |
The United Nations, gendered human rights and peacekeeping since 1945 Sandra Whitworth |
Gender, wars of globalization and humanitarian interventions since the end of the Cold War Kristen P. Williams |