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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction. Rethinking Civil–Military Connections: From Relations to Entanglements 1
- Chapter 1. The Invisible Uniform: Civil–Military Entanglements in the Everyday Life of Danish Soldiers’ Families 21
- Chapter 2. Capable Patriots: Narratives of Estonian Women Living with Military Service Members 42
- Chapter 3. Military, Society, and Violence through Popular Culture: Japan’s Self-Defense Forces 63
- Chapter 4. From Obligatory to Optional: Thirty Years of Civil–Military Entanglements in Norway 80
- Chapter 5. Framing the Other in Times of War and Terror: Explorations of the Military in Germany 100
- Chapter 6. Domesticating Civil–Military Entanglements: Multiplicity and Transnationality of Retired British Gurkhas’ Citizenship Negotiation 121
- Chapter 7. Civil–Military Relations from International Confl ict Zones to the United States: Notes on Mutual Discontents and Disruptive Logics 143
- Chapter 8. The Entangled Soldier: On the Messiness of War/Law/Morality 164
- Chapter 9. Mobility through Self-Defi ned Expertise: Israeli Security from the Occupation to Kenya 185
- Chapter 10. Explaining Efficiency, Seeking Recognition: Experiences of Argentine Peacekeepers in Haiti 206
- Chapter 11. Crossing over Barbed-Wire Entanglements of U.S. Military Bases: On Environmental Issues around MCAS Futenma in Okinawa, Japan 231
- Chapter 12. The Entanglements of Military Research at Home and Abroad: An Experience of an Israeli Anthropologist 251
- Afterword. Three Interpretations of Civil–Military Entanglements 274
- Index 282
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Acknowledgments vii
- Introduction. Rethinking Civil–Military Connections: From Relations to Entanglements 1
- Chapter 1. The Invisible Uniform: Civil–Military Entanglements in the Everyday Life of Danish Soldiers’ Families 21
- Chapter 2. Capable Patriots: Narratives of Estonian Women Living with Military Service Members 42
- Chapter 3. Military, Society, and Violence through Popular Culture: Japan’s Self-Defense Forces 63
- Chapter 4. From Obligatory to Optional: Thirty Years of Civil–Military Entanglements in Norway 80
- Chapter 5. Framing the Other in Times of War and Terror: Explorations of the Military in Germany 100
- Chapter 6. Domesticating Civil–Military Entanglements: Multiplicity and Transnationality of Retired British Gurkhas’ Citizenship Negotiation 121
- Chapter 7. Civil–Military Relations from International Confl ict Zones to the United States: Notes on Mutual Discontents and Disruptive Logics 143
- Chapter 8. The Entangled Soldier: On the Messiness of War/Law/Morality 164
- Chapter 9. Mobility through Self-Defi ned Expertise: Israeli Security from the Occupation to Kenya 185
- Chapter 10. Explaining Efficiency, Seeking Recognition: Experiences of Argentine Peacekeepers in Haiti 206
- Chapter 11. Crossing over Barbed-Wire Entanglements of U.S. Military Bases: On Environmental Issues around MCAS Futenma in Okinawa, Japan 231
- Chapter 12. The Entanglements of Military Research at Home and Abroad: An Experience of an Israeli Anthropologist 251
- Afterword. Three Interpretations of Civil–Military Entanglements 274
- Index 282