Hardship Duty
Autor Stephanie Bonnesen Limba Engleză Hardback – 19 dec 2023
Preț: 400.14 lei
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70.78€ • 82.98$ • 61.58£
70.78€ • 82.98$ • 61.58£
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197636244
ISBN-10: 0197636241
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 160 x 226 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197636241
Pagini: 256
Dimensiuni: 160 x 226 x 30 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
After reading Stephanie Bonnes' gripping Hardship Duty, I will never hear the word 'permeates' without cringing. In her thorough, interview-based investigation of today's U.S. military, Bonnes graphically exposes the 24/7 workings of institutional misogyny. For white, Black, Latina, and Indigenous women in this country's military there is no escape from assault, intimidation, and humiliation. Bonnes makes clear that the irresponsibility is up and down the chain of command. This is a horrifyingly valuable book."
Stephanie Bonnes writes with directness and passion, transforming the captivating and heart-rending voices of fifty servicewomen into a theoretically powerful and intellectually significant conceptualization of sexual assault and harassment in the U.S. military. The best book on the topic in years, Hardship Duty vividly captures how the combination of 'warrior masculinity' and 'femmephobia' institutionalizes sexually abusive consequences for servicewomen. A lucid and powerfully written work
Bonnes skillfully deploys chilling stories of sexual harassment and assault from her interviews with U.S. servicewomen, in the process peeling back the thin façade shrouding the sexism and misogyny embedded in military culture. Hardship Duty shows how the military still tolerates
Hardship Duty provides insight into why sexual violence is such an intractable problem in the U.S. military. Based on interviews with women serving in the U.S. armed forces, this painful book shows that the cultural context and organizational arrangements of the military systematically place women at risk of sexual violence
Throughout the book, Bonnes does an excellent job of highlighting the ways that race, gender, and at times, sexuality coalesce in women's experiences of sexual harassment and assault in the military.
Stephanie Bonnes writes with directness and passion, transforming the captivating and heart-rending voices of fifty servicewomen into a theoretically powerful and intellectually significant conceptualization of sexual assault and harassment in the U.S. military. The best book on the topic in years, Hardship Duty vividly captures how the combination of 'warrior masculinity' and 'femmephobia' institutionalizes sexually abusive consequences for servicewomen. A lucid and powerfully written work
Bonnes skillfully deploys chilling stories of sexual harassment and assault from her interviews with U.S. servicewomen, in the process peeling back the thin façade shrouding the sexism and misogyny embedded in military culture. Hardship Duty shows how the military still tolerates
Hardship Duty provides insight into why sexual violence is such an intractable problem in the U.S. military. Based on interviews with women serving in the U.S. armed forces, this painful book shows that the cultural context and organizational arrangements of the military systematically place women at risk of sexual violence
Throughout the book, Bonnes does an excellent job of highlighting the ways that race, gender, and at times, sexuality coalesce in women's experiences of sexual harassment and assault in the military.
Notă biografică
Stephanie Bonnes, PhD, is Assistant Professor of Criminal Justice and Assistant Dean of the Henry C. Lee College of Criminal Justice and Forensic Sciences at the University of New Haven. Her scholarship on military harassment and sexual violence has won awards from the Sociologists for Women in Society; the Sex and Gender Section and the Peace, War, and Social Conflict Section at the American Sociological Association; as well as the Division of Feminist Criminology and the Division of Victimology at the American Society of Criminology. Her work has been published in American Sociological Review, Gender & Society, Feminist Criminology, and Violence Against Women as well as media outlets such as the Washington Post.