Our site will be undergoing maintenance from 6 a.m. - 6 p.m. ET on Saturday, May 20. During this time, Bookshop, checkout, and other features will be unavailable. We apologize for the inconvenience.
Cookies must be enabled to use this website.
Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available
Book details
  • Genre:SOCIAL SCIENCE
  • SubGenre:Feminism & Feminist Theory
  • Language:English
  • Pages:235
  • eBook ISBN:9780982796719

Unmaking War, Remaking Men

How Empathy Can Reshape Our Politics, Our Soldiers and Ourselves

by Kathleen Barry

Book Image Not Available Book Image Not Available
Overview
Exposes masculinity and war from socialization of boys to men in combat to the aggression of U.S. and Israeli leaders committing war crimes and offers new global approaches to peace with new models of masculinity.
Description
Kathleen Barry answers the perennial question: Is war inevitable? with an emphatic "no." She explores soldiers' experiences through a politics of empathy and reveals how men’s lives are made expendable for combat in which they suffer loss of their own souls. She then probes the psychopathy that marks world leaders from George W. Bush to Ariel Sharon to Osama bin Laden to show how war is made from remorseless indifference to human life. Kathleen Barry asks: ‘What would it take to unmake war?’ by scrutinizing the demilitarized state of Costa Rica and comparing its claims of peace with its high rate of violence against women. Ending war requires unmaking masculinity, a change already under way in men who resist and refuse combat and transform their lives into a new kind of humanity.
About the author