The British military institution, like other armed organisations worldwide, relies heavily on the unpaid domestic labour performed by civilian women married to its servicemen. This labour does not often feature in public understandings of how the military functions, and feminists have argued that the invisibility of this labour contributes to the naturalisation of military power. The silence surrounding military wives’ unpaid labour, however, is not complete, and this article explores how such labour is represented in autobiographical accounts written by British military wives. These texts are often centred around descriptions of domestic labour and, moreover, make overt claims about the importance of this labour to the institution itself. ...
This article argues that the figures of the wounded and dead soldier are central organising nodes in...
Divisions between the social spheres of public and private are always fluid, mutually constitutive, ...
In 2014, one hundred and eighty-four female civilian women moved overseas with the British Army for ...
This article brings together research on civil wars and militarization with feminist scholarship on ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the...
Reading secondary data from military memoirs of recent conflicts through the prism of scholarship on...
This thesis examines the issue of marriage breakdown in the British Armed Forces in light of claims ...
This article explores sex and romance as under-examined aspects of wartime masculinities through a f...
The aim of this research is to describe and analyse the existence of consensual intimacy in the eve...
The feminized imaginary of “home and hearth” has long been central to the notion of soldiering as ma...
This study presents the personal testimonies of male British ex-Armed Forces personnel who have expe...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis (Routle...
During the Seven Years ’ War, many soldiers ’ wives and female camp followers contributed to the Bri...
This article examines men’s valuing of women's work in the post-1945 period. It considers men's pers...
This thesis examines the depiction of the working man in British culture during the Second World War...
This article argues that the figures of the wounded and dead soldier are central organising nodes in...
Divisions between the social spheres of public and private are always fluid, mutually constitutive, ...
In 2014, one hundred and eighty-four female civilian women moved overseas with the British Army for ...
This article brings together research on civil wars and militarization with feminist scholarship on ...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis via the...
Reading secondary data from military memoirs of recent conflicts through the prism of scholarship on...
This thesis examines the issue of marriage breakdown in the British Armed Forces in light of claims ...
This article explores sex and romance as under-examined aspects of wartime masculinities through a f...
The aim of this research is to describe and analyse the existence of consensual intimacy in the eve...
The feminized imaginary of “home and hearth” has long been central to the notion of soldiering as ma...
This study presents the personal testimonies of male British ex-Armed Forces personnel who have expe...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from Taylor & Francis (Routle...
During the Seven Years ’ War, many soldiers ’ wives and female camp followers contributed to the Bri...
This article examines men’s valuing of women's work in the post-1945 period. It considers men's pers...
This thesis examines the depiction of the working man in British culture during the Second World War...
This article argues that the figures of the wounded and dead soldier are central organising nodes in...
Divisions between the social spheres of public and private are always fluid, mutually constitutive, ...
In 2014, one hundred and eighty-four female civilian women moved overseas with the British Army for ...