This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from SAGE Publications via the DOI in this record.This article argues that wounded military bodies are affective technologies in the production of supportive publics in war. It builds on Elaine Scarry’s concept of substantiation, suggesting that the damaged or altered body functions in war as a vehicle for the making material of immaterial beliefs, values and ideas. Scarry’s focus on the affective force of the wounded body is elaborated and pushed further, by asserting that the concept of substantiation needs to be supplemented by an analysis of the work that wounded bodies do as political technologies. These arguments are mobilised through two examples of the public sta...
This collection has placed the body at the heart of critical thinking about war, giving embodiment a...
This article analyses the languages of wartime pain as seen in British and American memoirs from the...
Veterans have long sought to make sense of and capture their wartime experiences through a variety o...
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...
This article asks what is the significance of making the soldiering body (hyper)visible in war. In c...
This chapter places the body at the centre of critical thinking about war and its consequences. W...
Images of the body in pain are the primary medium through which we come to know war, torture and oth...
In the United States – as in other places in the ambit of biomedicine – the efforts exerted on and b...
Twentieth-century war is a unique cultural phenomenon and the last two decades have seen significant...
This paper responds to battlefield technologies that enhance the endurance and capacities of the wea...
Ph.D. University of Hawaii at Manoa 2014.Includes bibliographical references.This dissertation exami...
The Civil War produced over 350,000 permanently disabled men, in addition to millions of other types...
Veterans have long sought to make sense of and capture their wartime experiences through a variety o...
This thesis explores the politics of knowing the body at war. It argues that the exclusion of the bo...
This collection has placed the body at the heart of critical thinking about war, giving embodiment a...
This article analyses the languages of wartime pain as seen in British and American memoirs from the...
Veterans have long sought to make sense of and capture their wartime experiences through a variety o...
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...
This article asks what is the significance of making the soldiering body (hyper)visible in war. In c...
This chapter places the body at the centre of critical thinking about war and its consequences. W...
Images of the body in pain are the primary medium through which we come to know war, torture and oth...
In the United States – as in other places in the ambit of biomedicine – the efforts exerted on and b...
Twentieth-century war is a unique cultural phenomenon and the last two decades have seen significant...
This paper responds to battlefield technologies that enhance the endurance and capacities of the wea...
Ph.D. University of Hawaii at Manoa 2014.Includes bibliographical references.This dissertation exami...
The Civil War produced over 350,000 permanently disabled men, in addition to millions of other types...
Veterans have long sought to make sense of and capture their wartime experiences through a variety o...
This thesis explores the politics of knowing the body at war. It argues that the exclusion of the bo...
This collection has placed the body at the heart of critical thinking about war, giving embodiment a...
This article analyses the languages of wartime pain as seen in British and American memoirs from the...
Veterans have long sought to make sense of and capture their wartime experiences through a variety o...