ID | 138762 |
Title Proper | Sociological analysis of military resilience |
Other Title Information | opening up the debate |
Language | ENG |
Author | Mythen, Gabe ; Walklate, Sandra ; McGarry, Ross |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | The term ‘resilience’ has grown in its usage across a range of disciplines and practices. The US military and the British armed forces have typified this increasing use of ‘resilience’ in recent years within such initiatives as Comprehensive Soldier Fitness (CSF) and throughout British Army Doctrine. However by unpacking what being ‘resilient’ for soldiers might mean we explore the interaction between their personal ‘masculine’ characteristics, the structural environment within which they operate, and the civilian life they return to. In doing so this paper offers a critical sociological analysis combining the agency of the soldiers’ body with the structure of the military as a [total institution] to problematize issues of masculinity, stigma and resilience within the military setting. As such, we question if the fostering of ‘resilience’ in military personnel is something that may be productive during service, but counterproductive thereafter when service personnel return to civilian life as veterans. |
`In' analytical Note | Armed Forces and Society Vol. 41, No.2; Apr 2015: p.352-378 |
Journal Source | Armed Forces and Society Vol: 41 No 2 |
Key Words | Sociology ; Masculinity ; Resilience ; Stigma ; Soldiering ; Barriers to Care ; Comprehensive Soldier ; Fitness |