2017
DOI: 10.1177/0967010617696238
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Masculinity nostalgia: How war and occupation inspire a yearning for gender order

Abstract: This article investigates how war and occupation disrupt and produce new gender norms. It explores civilian masculinities and the ways in which masculinities are impacted by conflict and insecurity. Focusing on the West Bank, we argue that insecurity and occupation create the conditions for masculinity nostalgia, or a yearning for a set of gender norms and relations linked to fantasies of a secure, ‘traditional’ and ordered past. Masculinity nostalgia builds on conceptions of thwarted masculinity and the ways … Show more

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Cited by 48 publications
(24 citation statements)
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“…Feminist studies exploring the reconstruction of gender hierarchies after war have focussed directly and intensely on colonial relations. Prominent examples such as in Mackenzie’s (2012) work on the conjugal order in Sierra Leone, Mackenzie and Fosters’ (2017) work on yearning for gender order after war in Palestine, Meger’s (2016) research on gender hierarchy and sexual violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Myrttinen’s (2012) research on post-conflict masculinities in Timor Leste, all default to framing the gender order/hierarchy in the nation. In accounting for the multiplicity of power relations at play, these scholars have presented hybridized accounts, charting the integration of pre-colonial, colonial, and post-colonial ordering principles into the new orderings of masculinities and femininities.…”
Section: Gender Orders and Methodological Nationalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Feminist studies exploring the reconstruction of gender hierarchies after war have focussed directly and intensely on colonial relations. Prominent examples such as in Mackenzie’s (2012) work on the conjugal order in Sierra Leone, Mackenzie and Fosters’ (2017) work on yearning for gender order after war in Palestine, Meger’s (2016) research on gender hierarchy and sexual violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo, and Myrttinen’s (2012) research on post-conflict masculinities in Timor Leste, all default to framing the gender order/hierarchy in the nation. In accounting for the multiplicity of power relations at play, these scholars have presented hybridized accounts, charting the integration of pre-colonial, colonial, and post-colonial ordering principles into the new orderings of masculinities and femininities.…”
Section: Gender Orders and Methodological Nationalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The pattern leads Garzon to argue that just as sexual violence is used by armed groups to prevent women from keeping or regaining control over their lands, so too is it used as a form of discipline, because their leadership is interpreted as a transgression against both traditional gender regimes and patterns of racial subordination. (Garzon, 2017, p. 240) Thus, paramilitaries' violence is not only economically motivated, instrumental and in pursuit of a particular utility, but highly ideological and informed by both their hypermasculine identity and their ideologies about the rightful conduct of men and women, in a reflection of their 'masculinity nostalgia' (MacKenzie & Foster, 2017). They engage in an enforcement of a hierarchical gender order, with women being inferior to men, and certain groups of men (primarily Afro-Colombian and indigenous Colombians) as non-masculine and inferior to the militarized masculine hegemonic form, which thus reproduces violent forms of hyper-masculinity in their everyday activities as well as in their continued violence in Colombia's post-conflict period.…”
Section: Gendered and Racialized Logics Of Paramilitary Violencementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Problematically, and as pointed out by a growing body of critical scholarship, the literature's persisting focus on hyper-and militarized masculinities omits attention from the gendered experiences of nonviolent, nonsoldiering, and civilian men. 4 As MacKenzie and Foster (2017) note, "Although there is a rich and growing literature on masculinities and war, there remains little understanding of how non-combatant civilian men and civilian masculinities are impacted by war, conflict, occupation and militarization" (210).…”
Section: Wartime Sexual Violence Against Menmentioning
confidence: 99%