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Women and the War Story
 
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Women and the War Story [Paperback]

Miriam Cooke (Author)

Price: $32.95 & this item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping. Details
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Book Description

January 1, 1997
In a book that radically and fundamentally revises the way we think about war, Miriam Cooke charts the emerging tradition of women's contributions to what she calls the "War Story," a genre formerly reserved for men. Concentrating on the contemporary literature of the Arab world, Cooke looks at how alternatives to the master narrative challenge the authority of experience and the permission to write. She shows how women who write themselves and their experiences into the War Story undo the masculine contract with violence, sexuality, and glory. There is no single War Story, Cooke concludes; the standard narrative--and with it the way we think about and conduct war--can be changed.
As the traditional time, space, organization, and representation of war have shifted, so have ways of describing it. As drug wars, civil wars, gang wars, and ideological wars have moved into neighborhoods and homes, the line between combat zones and safe zones has blurred. Cooke shows how women's stories contest the acceptance of a dyadically structured world and break down the easy oppositions--home vs. front, civilian vs. combatant, war vs. peace, victory vs. defeat--that have framed, and ultimately promoted, war.

Editorial Reviews

From Library Journal

Following up on War's Other Voices (Cambridge Univ., 1988), Cooke examines women's voices in the telling of the story of war. As women write themselves into the war story, she asserts, they undo the traditionally "masculine contract between violence, sexuality and glory." She describes how our concept, construction, and representation of war have changed in the last half of the 20th century. The nuclear age, not to mention media and film coverage, has altered our perception of war and thus war itself. She discusses the literature produced during the Algerian war of independence, the Palestinian uprising during the two periods following Israeli occupation (in 1948 and 1967), the Iraqi-Iran war of the 1980s, and the Lebanese civil war in the aftermath of the 1982 Israeli invasion. She examines how authors like Assia Djebar and Shar Khalifa portray the role of women in war, as warriors and as civilians. Cooke does not, however, pass judgment on the intrinsic literary value or merit of this work. Hers is an interesting study, recommended for those interested in war and gender studies and Middle Eastern literature.?Roseanne Castellino, D'Youville Coll. Lib., Buffalo, N.Y.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From the Inside Flap

"An extremely important book. The author, a major figure in 20th century international intellectual debates, dares to enter the discourses of war and politics, nationalism and gender, from a specifically internationalist feminist position."--Jane Marcus, author of Art and Anger: Reading like a Woman

"To the canonical list of Crane, Sassoon, Remarque, and Malraux, we now must add Khalifa, Talib, and Nasrallah. These and other Arab women writers, Miriam Cooke reveals, have used their literary crafts to upset and destabilize the oddly comfortable codified 'War Story.' Cooke is a wonderful guide into their radically alternative visions of war and of the nation in whose name war is waged."--Cynthia Enloe

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