How Have Post-9/11 Wars Been Gendered?

The study evaluated the gendered representation of ‘War on Terror’ in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In order to do that, the study looked at the participation of women in the UK and US armed forces as a case study. Women’s violence was examined as opposed to their established gendered roles with...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Sarac, Busra Nisa
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.usm.my/31290/
http://eprints.usm.my/31290/1/Busra_Nisa_SARAC.pdf
_version_ 1848876530533400576
author Sarac, Busra Nisa
author_facet Sarac, Busra Nisa
author_sort Sarac, Busra Nisa
building USM Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The study evaluated the gendered representation of ‘War on Terror’ in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In order to do that, the study looked at the participation of women in the UK and US armed forces as a case study. Women’s violence was examined as opposed to their established gendered roles with instances of female icons participating in these wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The study includes historical background of role of women in war, how to understand manhood in relation to war, the social construction of women in relation to war, feminist perspectives (colonial feminism and pacifist feminism) towards the wars, and the transformation of women from Home-Front to Front-Line after the 9/11. To understand representation of women and collect data, the reports by UK Ministry of Defense(MoD), UK Parliament records, and reports by the US Department of Defense were used.In particular, the sources published after the 9/11 have been analysed in an effort to provide better analysis of notion of women in relation to the wars. It means that the study incorporates the years between 2001 and 2014. The study figured out that the rhetoric of women’s rights was used as a justification to wage the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The sources were selected through their discussions about the place of women in relation to that of men in the wars. That is another analysis of the research that the representations and roles of women were defined to consolidate the notion of hegemonic masculinity. In a nutshell, this study has examined the relation between gender and war in an effort to understand how the wars after the 9/11 have changed gendered roles.
first_indexed 2025-11-15T17:01:01Z
format Conference or Workshop Item
id usm-31290
institution Universiti Sains Malaysia
institution_category Local University
language English
last_indexed 2025-11-15T17:01:01Z
publishDate 2016
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling usm-312902018-02-07T07:49:21Z http://eprints.usm.my/31290/ How Have Post-9/11 Wars Been Gendered? Sarac, Busra Nisa B1-5802 Philosophy (General) The study evaluated the gendered representation of ‘War on Terror’ in the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. In order to do that, the study looked at the participation of women in the UK and US armed forces as a case study. Women’s violence was examined as opposed to their established gendered roles with instances of female icons participating in these wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The study includes historical background of role of women in war, how to understand manhood in relation to war, the social construction of women in relation to war, feminist perspectives (colonial feminism and pacifist feminism) towards the wars, and the transformation of women from Home-Front to Front-Line after the 9/11. To understand representation of women and collect data, the reports by UK Ministry of Defense(MoD), UK Parliament records, and reports by the US Department of Defense were used.In particular, the sources published after the 9/11 have been analysed in an effort to provide better analysis of notion of women in relation to the wars. It means that the study incorporates the years between 2001 and 2014. The study figured out that the rhetoric of women’s rights was used as a justification to wage the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. The sources were selected through their discussions about the place of women in relation to that of men in the wars. That is another analysis of the research that the representations and roles of women were defined to consolidate the notion of hegemonic masculinity. In a nutshell, this study has examined the relation between gender and war in an effort to understand how the wars after the 9/11 have changed gendered roles. 2016-11-16 Conference or Workshop Item PeerReviewed application/pdf en http://eprints.usm.my/31290/1/Busra_Nisa_SARAC.pdf Sarac, Busra Nisa (2016) How Have Post-9/11 Wars Been Gendered? In: 3rd KANITA POSTGRADUATE INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON GENDER STUDIES, 16 – 17 November 2016, Universiti Sains Malaysia, Penang.
spellingShingle B1-5802 Philosophy (General)
Sarac, Busra Nisa
How Have Post-9/11 Wars Been Gendered?
title How Have Post-9/11 Wars Been Gendered?
title_full How Have Post-9/11 Wars Been Gendered?
title_fullStr How Have Post-9/11 Wars Been Gendered?
title_full_unstemmed How Have Post-9/11 Wars Been Gendered?
title_short How Have Post-9/11 Wars Been Gendered?
title_sort how have post-9/11 wars been gendered?
topic B1-5802 Philosophy (General)
url http://eprints.usm.my/31290/
http://eprints.usm.my/31290/1/Busra_Nisa_SARAC.pdf