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Shell-Shocked Intimacies - (Studies in Modern and Contemporary France) by Angélique Ibáñez Aristondo (Hardcover)
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Highlights
- Ebook available to libraries exclusively as part of the JSTOR Path to Open intiative.The First World War generated a climate of exacerbated nationalism, deep-running anxieties over gender, and heightened masculinisation of suffering.
- Author(s): Angélique Ibáñez Aristondo
- 256 Pages
- Social Science, Gender Studies
- Series Name: Studies in Modern and Contemporary France
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Book Synopsis
Ebook available to libraries exclusively as part of the JSTOR Path to Open intiative.
The First World War generated a climate of exacerbated nationalism, deep-running anxieties over gender, and heightened masculinisation of suffering. In France, this volatile combination provided meaning to multiple ways of obscuring and trivialising diverse forms of gender-based violence and aggression towards women. The book retraces this cultural pattern by uncovering shifts and continuities in discourses on sexual consent and gender violence in French culture and literature of the First World War. This research provides historical insight and critical depth to contemporary debates on sexual consent by arguing that the notion of cultural exception in gender relations is better accounted for through the country's history of violence and militarization. Moreover, the research frames amour à la francaise, or the so-called French exception in gender relations, as a response to the brutalization in the war and postwar period. It highlights the fact that indifference to gender violence was a shared denominator of the 'French exception' both now and then. It draws on a broad range of sources - including visual materials, literary works, judicial records, media sources, and testimonials - and tools from literary criticism, cultural history and critical discourse analysis to uncover a silenced past dominated for too long by a male gaze, revising in the process the historiographic outlook on gender relations and politics in the area covered.
Review Quotes
"By re-reading the gender dynamics of this period in the light of what we now understand as femicide (and its related implications), the author renders an important service." - Professor Melanie Hawthorne, Texas A&M University
"I found the book compelling. Well researched and written, it incorporates a variety of primary and secondary sources, engaging therefore in important discussions about representations of World War I in French history and national memory." - Professor Venita Datta, Wellesley College