Table of Contents
Section I: Military Manpower: Gender, Service and Citizenship in American History
- The Shared Language of Gender in Colonial North American Warfare
- Citizen-Soldiers in the Revolutionary Era and New Republic
- Beyond Borders and Combatants: Wars of Empire and Expansion
- Beyond the Brothers’ War: Gender and the American Civil War
- Gee!! I Wish I Were a Man: Gender and the Great War
- "The Women Behind the Men, Behind the Gun": Gendered Identities and Militarization in the Second World War
- Homophobia, Housewives, and Hyper-Masculinity: Gender and American Policymaking in the Nuclear Age, 1947-1963
- Gentle Warriors, Gunslingers, and Girls Next Door: Gender and the Vietnam War
- Transitioning to an All-Volunteer Force
- 9/11, Gender and Wars without End
Section II: Mobilizing Gender in the Service of War
- Gender as a Cause of War
- Gendering the "Enemy" and Gendering the "Ally:" United States Militarized Fictions of War and Peace
- Gender and American Foreign Relations
- Gender and Militarism in U.S. Culture During the Long Twentieth Century
Section III: Gender Sexuality and Military Engagements
- "Patriotism is Neither Masculine nor Feminine:" Gender and the Work of War
- U.S. Military Personnel and Families Abroad: Gender, Sexuality, Race, and Power in the U.S. Military’s Relations with Foreign Nations and Local Inhabitants during Wartime
- "Homos," "Whores," Rapists, and the Clap: American Military Sexuality Since the Revolutionary War
- Rape, Reform, and the Reaction: Gender and Sexual Violence in the U.S. Military
Section IV: Gendered Aftermaths
- To Recognize Those who Served: Gendered Analyses of Veterans’ Policies, Representations, and Experiences
- Best Men, Broken Men: Gender, Disability, and American Veterans
- The Covert and Hidden Memory of Gender