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After War: The Weight of Life at Walter Reed
Zoë H. Wool
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Description for After War: The Weight of Life at Walter Reed
Paperback. Zoe H. Wool explores how the most severely injured veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars rehabilitating at Walter Reed Medical Center-whether recovering from losing a limb or sustaining a traumatic brain injury-struggle to build some kind of ordinary life in a situation that is anything but ordinary. Series: Critical Global Health: Evidence, Efficacy, Ethnography. Num Pages: 264 pages, 17 illustrations. BIC Classification: JFFG; JHMC. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 230 x 153 x 15. Weight in Grams: 392.
In After War Zoë 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.
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2015
Publisher
Duke University Press United States
Number of pages
264
Condition
New
Series
Critical Global Health: Evidence, Efficacy, Ethnography
Number of Pages
264
Place of Publication
North Carolina, United States
ISBN
9780822360032
SKU
V9780822360032
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 15 to 20 working days
Ref
99-2
About Zoë H. Wool
Zoë H. Wool is Assistant Professor of Anthropology at Rice University.
Reviews for After War: The Weight of Life at Walter Reed
"For anyone looking for an intimate depiction of military trauma or scholars looking for a strong example of how the rising generation of anthropologists are writing about violence, After War is a must read."
Christopher Webb
Somatosphere
"After War demands that we reckon with the ways violence lives on in even the most civilian and intimate of spaces. ... After War focuses narrowly on veterans, but in asking how we make the world inhabitable after world-altering violence, it points to the limits of medicalized understandings of trauma. If only some ways of being 'count' as posttraumatic, we miss the ways in which posttraumatic movement is a sensible reaction to violence."
Emma Shaw Crane
Public Books
"...provocative and instructive. . . . Wool’s writing is relentless, and she has an evocative way of explicating contradiction such that vivid and unexpected intimacies snap into place. . . . In After War, Wool succeeds in significantly reworking notions of suffering as they are rendered in ethnographic accounts."
Lauren Cubellis
Savage Minds
"Zoë Wool’s After War offers an ethnographically rich, theoretically nuanced, and compulsively readable analysis of the experiences of injured soldiers at one of the nation’s most iconic medical centers.... After War is an important addition to current anthropological studies of the body, health, disability, mental illness, conflict, and trauma, and would be an excellent addition for courses at the graduate or undergraduate level. It will also be of interest to scholars of contemporary military history, American Studies, and Disability Studies."
Elizabeth Lewis
Medical Anthropology Quarterly
"What sets this book apart are the detailed and interesting stories of wounded soldiers and their families attempting to return to the ordinary."
R. I. Hooper
Choice
"After War is indispensable to the anthropological literature on the United States military and the country’s post-9/11 wars. . . . [A] compelling model for any scholar thinking about the politics and poetics of ethnographic representation of people whose bodies and identities are overdetermined in one way or another."
Anna Zogas
Medicine Anthropology Theory
"This is an ethnography enriched by the kind of experiential detail only available from immersion. Wool captures the serendipitous moments—the arguments and indiscretions, the rants, confusion, frustration, and ever-present boredom—that are lost with quicker methodologies.... After War is not...an antiwar ethnography but a necessarily limited truth of war narrative that I highly recommend."
Steven Gardiner
American Anthropologist
"[U]nlike earlier ethnographic studies, which focus on the 'symbolic, social, and institutional politics' of war injury, After War offers a uniquely intimate look at soldiers' embodied experiences and ordinary lives (4). For this reason alone, the book is a must-read for any serious scholar of disabled vets. . . . After War is an important contribution to the growing literature on the embodied legacies of war injury."
John Matthew Kinder
Disability Studies Quarterly
"Zoë Wool’s ethnography of severely injured American soldiers recuperating at Walter Reed Army Medical Hospital is, in a word, amazing."
Pamela Moss
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute
Christopher Webb
Somatosphere
"After War demands that we reckon with the ways violence lives on in even the most civilian and intimate of spaces. ... After War focuses narrowly on veterans, but in asking how we make the world inhabitable after world-altering violence, it points to the limits of medicalized understandings of trauma. If only some ways of being 'count' as posttraumatic, we miss the ways in which posttraumatic movement is a sensible reaction to violence."
Emma Shaw Crane
Public Books
"...provocative and instructive. . . . Wool’s writing is relentless, and she has an evocative way of explicating contradiction such that vivid and unexpected intimacies snap into place. . . . In After War, Wool succeeds in significantly reworking notions of suffering as they are rendered in ethnographic accounts."
Lauren Cubellis
Savage Minds
"Zoë Wool’s After War offers an ethnographically rich, theoretically nuanced, and compulsively readable analysis of the experiences of injured soldiers at one of the nation’s most iconic medical centers.... After War is an important addition to current anthropological studies of the body, health, disability, mental illness, conflict, and trauma, and would be an excellent addition for courses at the graduate or undergraduate level. It will also be of interest to scholars of contemporary military history, American Studies, and Disability Studies."
Elizabeth Lewis
Medical Anthropology Quarterly
"What sets this book apart are the detailed and interesting stories of wounded soldiers and their families attempting to return to the ordinary."
R. I. Hooper
Choice
"After War is indispensable to the anthropological literature on the United States military and the country’s post-9/11 wars. . . . [A] compelling model for any scholar thinking about the politics and poetics of ethnographic representation of people whose bodies and identities are overdetermined in one way or another."
Anna Zogas
Medicine Anthropology Theory
"This is an ethnography enriched by the kind of experiential detail only available from immersion. Wool captures the serendipitous moments—the arguments and indiscretions, the rants, confusion, frustration, and ever-present boredom—that are lost with quicker methodologies.... After War is not...an antiwar ethnography but a necessarily limited truth of war narrative that I highly recommend."
Steven Gardiner
American Anthropologist
"[U]nlike earlier ethnographic studies, which focus on the 'symbolic, social, and institutional politics' of war injury, After War offers a uniquely intimate look at soldiers' embodied experiences and ordinary lives (4). For this reason alone, the book is a must-read for any serious scholar of disabled vets. . . . After War is an important contribution to the growing literature on the embodied legacies of war injury."
John Matthew Kinder
Disability Studies Quarterly
"Zoë Wool’s ethnography of severely injured American soldiers recuperating at Walter Reed Army Medical Hospital is, in a word, amazing."
Pamela Moss
Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute