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Comprehensive Soldier Fitness

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Journal Article
Public Culture (2015) 27 (3 (77)): 449–485.
Published: 01 September 2015
...-military recreational programs, the article explores new concepts of humanism and global order being produced and disseminated as a praxis of persistent war. 2015 anthropology of war Comprehensive Soldier Fitness humanism resilience US Army Over the past four decades, and particularly since...
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Journal Article
Public Culture (2008) 20 (2): 177–191.
Published: 01 May 2008
... refugees in the media, had been removed to safety, the city quickly became a sealed-off area governed by martial law. More than seventy thousand soldiers, police, and law enforcement officers came to establish order over the estimated five thousand residents that remained. The undamaged central...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2024) 36 (2 (103)): 209–229.
Published: 01 May 2024
... happened to her and her husband,” the journalist interjected. The fixer translated, and he and the young woman engaged in a long exchange. The woman explained how Mosul was long neglected by the government in Baghdad and mentioned recent distrust between local policemen and Iraqi soldiers from the south...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1997) 10 (1): 24–60.
Published: 01 January 1997
... photojournalists. The security apparatus claims that photographs of state personnel doing their duty can find their way to the IRA and other Republican paramilitary groups and serve to identify off-duty soldiers, police- men, and firemen...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2011) 23 (1): 121–156.
Published: 01 January 2011
... published La question, a graphic account of his own torture at the hands of the French military.5 La gangrène, which appeared in June 1959 and was immediately banned, documented the intimate technolo- gies of brutal indignities that French soldiers inflicted on Algerian women and men.6 Pierre...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2008) 20 (3): 539–549.
Published: 01 September 2008
... of U.S. soldiers flown home for burial (and thereby lost her job for breaching the Pentagon ban on images of the returning dead), making the consequences of war visible remains a vital element of resistance. How, though, can we make such diverse inquiries resonate with the visceral complexities...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1991) 3 (2): 71–92.
Published: 01 May 1991
..., probably fiom World War I; and an Army unit of Apache Indian Beneath the hats and a dis- play of dog tags (beanng names that we are to identify as “ethnic”) is a row of informal photographs showing soldiers engaged in combat. The display also contains a recruiting poster, a World War I-era poster...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1989) 2 (1): 31–53.
Published: 01 January 1989
... narrative moments involve the problem of spectatorship. The turning point in Lu Xun's physician-turned-writer career was a movie-viewing experi- ence. Lu Xun watched a film sequence showing Japanese soldiers slaying a Chinese charged with the crime of espionage for Russians. The spectators...
Journal Article
Public Culture (1999) 11 (1): 269–293.
Published: 01 January 1999
... they have, by nature, a propensity. If we want good citizens, if we want brave soldiers who are animated in combat and humane in triumph, prohibit spectacles that inflate sentiments and that dull [embrutecen] reason.13 Readers would be incorrect, too, to think that the dangerous “lowliest...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2002) 14 (1): 91–124.
Published: 01 January 2002
... of a partly ritualized violence that the modern sensibility finds gruesome (e.g., once decapitated, their heads were carried around on pikes and displayed). The royal government would react, send in soldiers, restore order, and effect some exemplary punishments (more killing, with the ritual elements...
Journal Article
Public Culture (2007) 19 (3): 521–566.
Published: 01 September 2007
... and prisoners died in six months.101 Hygiene became an urgent political priority and sanitary regimes correspondingly more severe. It was Rus- sian soldiers — rather than the atrocious conditions — who were blamed for the 98. See Howard...