As seen in military documents, medical journals, novels, films, television shows, and memoirs, soldiers’ invisible wounds are not innate cracks in individual psyches that break under the stress of war. Instead, the generation of weary warriors is caught up in wider social and political networks and institutions—families, activist groups, government bureaucracies, welfare state programs—mediated through a military hierarchy, psychiatry rooted in mind-body sciences, and various cultural constructs of masculinity. This book offers a history of military psychiatry from the American Civil War to the latest Afghanistan conflict. The authors trace the effects of power and knowledge in relation to the emotional and psychological trauma that shapes soldiers’ bodies, minds, and souls, developing an extensive account of the emergence, diagnosis, and treatment of soldiers’ invisible wounds.
Cuprins
List of Tables
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Weary Warriors Walk Among Us: Combat, Knowledge Circulation, and Naming Traumatized Soldiers
Chapter 1. Ravished Minds and Ill Bodies: Power, Embodiment, Dispositifs
Chapter 2. Unsettling Notions: War Neuroses, Soldiering, and Broken Embodiments
Chapter 3. Classifying Bodies through Diagnosis: Knowledges, Locations, and Categorical Enclosures
Chapter 4. Managing Illness through Power: Regulation, Resistance and Truth Games
Chapter 5. Cultural Accounts of the Soldier as Subject: Folds, Disclosures and Enactments
Chapter 6. Fixing Soldiers: The Treatment of Bodies, Minds, and Souls
Chapter 7. The Soldier in Context: Psychiatric Practices, Military Imperatives, and Masculine Ideals
Chapter 8. Soldiering On: Care of Self, Status Passages, and Citizenship Claims
Chapter 9. Military Bodies and Battles Multiple: Embodied Trauma, Ontological Politics, and Patchwork Warriors
References
Index
Despre autor
Michael J. Prince is Lansdowne Professor of Social Policy at the University of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. He is author of Absent Citizens: Disability Politics and Policy in Canada (University of Toronto Press, 2009), author and co-editor with Glen Toner and Leslie Pal of Policy: From Ideas to Implementation (Mc Gill-Queen’s University Press, 2010), co-author with Bruce Doern of Three Bio-Realms (University of Toronto Press, 2012), and co-author with James Rice of Changing Politics of Canadian Social Policy, 2nd edition (University of Toronto Press, 2013).