陌生人的善良:士兵、外科医生、平民,以及美国内战中的冲突亲密关系

Q1 Arts and Humanities Critical Military Studies Pub Date : 2020-04-02 DOI:10.1080/23337486.2019.1613085
S. Grant
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引用次数: 0

摘要

美国内战通常被认为是一种新的工业纪律的始作俑者,它取代了内战前时代的个人主义。它的传统叙事轨迹是一种巩固与合作,强调从冲突的混乱中出现秩序,以及为同样光荣的国家机构服务的理想化的、个人的男性身体的秩序。这篇文章使关于战时性别、军人气概和国民健康的当代假设复杂化。本书将征兵委员会医生在冲突后期编写的报告与精选的护理回忆录并置,考察了精英们关于国家卫生和军事准备的假设如何受到战争亲密现实的挑战。它探讨了通过联邦草案在自愿和强制之间揭示的紧张关系,以及在冲突的后期从亲密到疏远的结果。它揭示了受内战影响的陌生人之间的亲密关系并不总是积极或支持的。他们常常控制着挑战国家叙事的对抗,这种叙事长期存在于美国19世纪中期的国内冲突中。
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The kindness of strangers: soldiers, surgeons, civilians, and conflict intimacies in the American Civil War
ABSTRACT America’s Civil War is often identified as the instigator of a new, industrial discipline that replaced the individualism of the antebellum era. Its traditional narrative trajectory is one of consolidation and cooperation that emphasizes the emergence of order from the chaos of conflict and the ordering of idealized, individual masculine bodies in the service of an equally glorified national body. This article complicates contemporary assumptions pertaining to gender, martial manhood, and national health in a wartime context. Juxtaposing the reports produced by Draft Board doctors in the later years of the conflict against a selection of nursing memoirs, it examines the ways in which elite assumptions about national health and military preparedness were challenged by the intimate realities of the war. It explores the tensions revealed through the federal draft between voluntarism and coercion, and the resultant shift from intimacy to estrangement in the later years of the conflict. It reveals that the points of intimacy between strangers effected by the Civil War were not always positive or supportive. Too often they were controlling confrontations that challenge the national narrative that has for so long pertained in the case of America’s mid-nineteenth century civil conflict.
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来源期刊
Critical Military Studies
Critical Military Studies Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
1.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
20
期刊介绍: Critical Military Studies provides a rigorous, innovative platform for interdisciplinary debate on the operation of military power. It encourages the interrogation and destabilization of often taken-for-granted categories related to the military, militarism and militarization. It especially welcomes original thinking on contradictions and tensions central to the ways in which military institutions and military power work, how such tensions are reproduced within different societies and geopolitical arenas, and within and beyond academic discourse. Contributions on experiences of militarization among groups and individuals, and in hitherto underexplored, perhaps even seemingly ‘non-military’ settings are also encouraged. All submitted manuscripts are subject to initial appraisal by the Editor, and, if found suitable for further consideration, to double-blind peer review by independent, anonymous expert referees. The Journal also includes a non-peer reviewed section, Encounters, showcasing multidisciplinary forms of critique such as film and photography, and engaging with policy debates and activism.
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