Literature DB >> 22574391

Armor and anesthesia: exposure, feeling, and the soldier's body.

Kenneth T MacLeish1.   

Abstract

For many civilians, the high-tech weapons, armor, and military medicine with which U.S. soldiers are equipped present an image of lethal capacity and physical invulnerability. But, as this article explores, soldiers themselves just as often associate the life-sustaining technology of modern warfare with feelings that range from a pragmatic ambivalence about exposure to harm all the way to profoundly unsettling vulnerability. This article, based on fieldwork among soldiers and military families at the U.S. Army's Ft. Hood, examines sensory and affective dimensions of soldiers' intimate bodily relationships with the technologies that alternately or even simultaneously keep them alive and expose them to harm. I argue that modern military discipline and technology conspire to cultivate soldiers as highly durable, capable, unfeeling, interchangeable bodies, or what might be called, after Susan Buck-Morss (1992), anesthetic subjects. But for soldiers themselves, their training, combat environment, protective gear, and weapons are a rich font of both emotional and bodily feeling that exists in complex tension with the also deeply felt military imperative to carry on in the face of extreme discomfort and danger.

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Mesh:

Year:  2012        PMID: 22574391      PMCID: PMC3759285          DOI: 10.1111/j.1548-1387.2011.01196.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Med Anthropol Q        ISSN: 0745-5194


  3 in total

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Journal:  N Engl J Med       Date:  2004-12-09       Impact factor: 91.245

2.  Incorporating the prosthetic: traumatic, limb-loss, rehabilitation and refigured military bodies.

Authors:  Seth D Messinger
Journal:  Disabil Rehabil       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 3.033

3.  Getting past the accident: explosive devices, limb loss, and refashioning a life in a military medical center.

Authors:  Seth D Messinger
Journal:  Med Anthropol Q       Date:  2010-09
  3 in total
  3 in total

1.  Medication by Proxy: The Devolution of Psychiatric Power and Shared Accountability to Psychopharmaceutical Use Among Soldiers in America's Post-9/11 Wars.

Authors:  Jocelyn Lim Chua
Journal:  Cult Med Psychiatry       Date:  2020-12

2.  Skin problems of Korean military personnel changes in the use of cosmetics and differences in preference according to different characteristics: Focused on comparison pre- and post-enlistment.

Authors:  Jinkyung Lee; Ki Han Kwon
Journal:  Health Sci Rep       Date:  2021-09-14

3.  The impact of body armor on physical performance of law enforcement personnel: a systematic review.

Authors:  Colin Tomes; Robin Marc Orr; Rodney Pope
Journal:  Ann Occup Environ Med       Date:  2017-05-16
  3 in total

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