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In After War Zoe H. Wool explores how the American soldiers most
severely injured in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars struggle to build
some kind of ordinary life while recovering at Walter Reed Army
Medical Center from grievous injuries like lost limbs and traumatic
brain injury. Between 2007 and 2008, Wool spent time with many of
these mostly male soldiers and their families and loved ones in an
effort to understand what it's like to be blown up and then pulled
toward an ideal and ordinary civilian life in a place where the
possibilities of such a life are called into question.
Contextualizing these soldiers within a broader political and moral
framework, Wool considers the soldier body as a historically,
politically, and morally laden national icon of normative
masculinity. She shows how injury, disability, and the reality of
soldiers' experiences and lives unsettle this icon and disrupt the
all-too-common narrative of the heroic wounded veteran as the
embodiment of patriotic self-sacrifice. For these soldiers, the
uncanny ordinariness of seemingly extraordinary everyday
circumstances and practices at Walter Reed create a reality that
will never be normal.
In After War Zoe H. Wool explores how the American soldiers most
severely injured in the Iraq and Afghanistan wars struggle to build
some kind of ordinary life while recovering at Walter Reed Army
Medical Center from grievous injuries like lost limbs and traumatic
brain injury. Between 2007 and 2008, Wool spent time with many of
these mostly male soldiers and their families and loved ones in an
effort to understand what it's like to be blown up and then pulled
toward an ideal and ordinary civilian life in a place where the
possibilities of such a life are called into question.
Contextualizing these soldiers within a broader political and moral
framework, Wool considers the soldier body as a historically,
politically, and morally laden national icon of normative
masculinity. She shows how injury, disability, and the reality of
soldiers' experiences and lives unsettle this icon and disrupt the
all-too-common narrative of the heroic wounded veteran as the
embodiment of patriotic self-sacrifice. For these soldiers, the
uncanny ordinariness of seemingly extraordinary everyday
circumstances and practices at Walter Reed create a reality that
will never be normal.
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