In March 2003 (the eve of Iraq’s invasion) the George W. Bush Administration reissued, extended, and enforced a Directive prohibiting the publication and broadcast of images and videos capturing the ritual repatriation of America’s war dead. This Directive (known as the Dover Ban) is exemplary of a wider set of more subtle processes and practices of American statecraft working to move suffering and dead American soldiers out of the American public eye’s sight. This is due, I argue, to dominant (Government and Military) bodies knowing, valuing, and counting generic soldier material as but a “precious resource” with which to fuel the GWoT. However, my investigation into the (in)visibility of suffering and dead American soldiers since 9/11 rev...
American GIs who liberated Dachau from the Nazis in April 1945 exist in our collective memory as ico...
At the end of July 2008, the media reported that 4,600 service members have died in Operations Iraqi...
In contrast to the expansive literature on military casualties and support for war, we know very lit...
Why has support for casualties in foreign wars declined in the United States since Vietnam? We compa...
In this article, we argue that the public will tolerate significant numbers of U.S. combat casualtie...
This paper offers an insight into the efforts made by war memorial organizations to remember those w...
How does a memorial curate an image of conflict when it is dwarfed by 6.5million square feet of the ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis (Routle...
This article argues that the figures of the wounded and dead soldier are central organising nodes in...
Many influential theorists of nationalism see war as a social conflict that to great extent homogeni...
What are Americans willing to sacrifice for war and during war? In the wake of the 9/11 attacks, Ame...
What are Americans willing to sacrifice for war and during war? In the wake of the 9/11 attacks, Ame...
This article investigates two related issues: (1) the on-the-ground experience of the fierce US war....
The extent to which combat casualties influence the public's support for war is one of the most freq...
Domestic political support is an important factor constraining the use of American military power ar...
American GIs who liberated Dachau from the Nazis in April 1945 exist in our collective memory as ico...
At the end of July 2008, the media reported that 4,600 service members have died in Operations Iraqi...
In contrast to the expansive literature on military casualties and support for war, we know very lit...
Why has support for casualties in foreign wars declined in the United States since Vietnam? We compa...
In this article, we argue that the public will tolerate significant numbers of U.S. combat casualtie...
This paper offers an insight into the efforts made by war memorial organizations to remember those w...
How does a memorial curate an image of conflict when it is dwarfed by 6.5million square feet of the ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis (Routle...
This article argues that the figures of the wounded and dead soldier are central organising nodes in...
Many influential theorists of nationalism see war as a social conflict that to great extent homogeni...
What are Americans willing to sacrifice for war and during war? In the wake of the 9/11 attacks, Ame...
What are Americans willing to sacrifice for war and during war? In the wake of the 9/11 attacks, Ame...
This article investigates two related issues: (1) the on-the-ground experience of the fierce US war....
The extent to which combat casualties influence the public's support for war is one of the most freq...
Domestic political support is an important factor constraining the use of American military power ar...
American GIs who liberated Dachau from the Nazis in April 1945 exist in our collective memory as ico...
At the end of July 2008, the media reported that 4,600 service members have died in Operations Iraqi...
In contrast to the expansive literature on military casualties and support for war, we know very lit...