TY - JOUR
T1 - Engendering the Gulf War Israeli nurses and the discourse of soldiering
AU - Weiss, Meira
PY - 1998
Y1 - 1998
N2 - The universalized, gendered myth of war is that of men in arms and women at home. The Israeli experience of the Gulf War spelled an opposite situation in which fighters were not called for active military duties and the home became "the front." This reversal was especially blatant in the case of Israeli nurses stationed in the hospital. This article analyzes the rhetorics of war among these nurses, describing how it changed from panic and uncertainty, through a discourse of soldiering, to frustration. This transformation is interpreted within a dual framework, as a professional gender struggle embedded in a national script of militarism.
AB - The universalized, gendered myth of war is that of men in arms and women at home. The Israeli experience of the Gulf War spelled an opposite situation in which fighters were not called for active military duties and the home became "the front." This reversal was especially blatant in the case of Israeli nurses stationed in the hospital. This article analyzes the rhetorics of war among these nurses, describing how it changed from panic and uncertainty, through a discourse of soldiering, to frustration. This transformation is interpreted within a dual framework, as a professional gender struggle embedded in a national script of militarism.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=24944515124&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/089124198027002002
DO - 10.1177/089124198027002002
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AN - SCOPUS:24944515124
SN - 0891-2416
VL - 27
SP - 197
EP - 218
JO - Journal of Contemporary Ethnography
JF - Journal of Contemporary Ethnography
IS - 2
ER -