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Globalization and Militarism
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Table of Contents

Preface to the New Edition
Chapter 1: Words to Investigate By
Chapter 2: “Feminist Curiosity” and Globalized Militarism
Chapter 3: Tracking the Militarized Global Sneaker
Chapter 4: How Does “National Security” Become Militarized?
Chapter 5: Paying Close Attention to Women Inside Militaries
Chapter 6: Wielding Masculinity inside Abu Ghraib and Guantánamo
Chapter 7: Demilitarizing Your Closet: Do You Wear “Camo”?
Chapter 8: The Globalized Lives of Japanese Women
Chapter 9: Conclusion: The Global, the Local, and the Personal
References
Index
About the Author

About the Author

Cynthia Enloe is research professor in the Department of International Development, Community, and Social Change and the Department of Women’s Studies at Clark University. Her books include the updated edition of the groundbreaking Bananas, Beaches, and Bases: Making Feminist Sense of International Politics.

Reviews

Cynthia Enloe continues her quest to investigate the patriarchal dimensions of militarization and globalization. Using feminist curiosity she skillfully guides the reader in a series of insightful analyses that unravel the relations between globally militarized structures and the personal, even trivial, constructs of everyday lives. With brilliance and clarity, she shows how masculinities and femininities are tied to processes of militarization and demilitarization in diverse locations across the globe. This book is a must read for students and scholars seeking to understand how women's and men's lives shape global politics.
*Annica Kronsell, Lund University*

Cynthia Enloe’s vibrant and inspiring prose takes us on a global journey of the everyday to uncover the gendered dynamics of militarization in all sorts of unexpected places—from the militarized politics of the sneaker to the wielding of masculinity in Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo to the rise of camouflage as fashion to women peace activists mobilizing in Japan. Enloe uses her sharp feminist curiosity to remind us that we should always beware of the adjectives ‘natural’ or ‘trivial,’ for these often obscure how militarization works. As always, Enloe’s work is essential for anyone who wants to question the status quo in global politics and is a call to action for those who want to promote change for a more peaceful, just, and feminist world.
*Daniel Conway, University of Westminster, author of Masculinities, Militarisation and the End Conscription Campaign: War Resistance in Apartheid South Africa*

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