Maria Rashid studies relationships in military households as intimate sites that make visible the everyday practices of war. She argues that the silences and disconnects experienced in them are not a side effect of soldiering and its demands but a deliberate product and requirement of military training and service.
Read MoreCladia Brunner takes a closer look at various sexed-gendered positions in the discursive and cognitive processes of legitimating military interventions abroad and political violence at home.
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