The language used by American military personnel can be intense and
confrontational, yet the relationship between language and military
violence is rarely examined in depth. This groundbreaking book offers
a unique perspective on how language facilitates the work of combat
infantry-the state's killable killers. Through vivid ethnographic
research, Janet McIntosh meticulously traces the nuances of military
“kill talk” as it permeates the vast nervous system of the
military, from the first exposure to yelling in Marine Corps basic
training to the dark humor and nihilistic expressions found in war
zones in Vietnam and the Middle East. McIntosh reveals how military
trainers use language to deindividuate, toughen, and masculinize
recruits, while infantry soldiers develop distinct linguistic
repertoires and attitudes to suppress empathy, dehumanize and
racialize the enemy, cope with loss, and dwell in a moral gray
zone._Kill Talk_ also addresses national debates over language use in
a diverse world, exploring tensions between calls for sensitivity and
restraint in military speech and the perception that these can
threaten national security. The book highlights the contradictions
between the rhetoric of military honor and moral integrity and the
harsh, sometimes depraved, language of combatants, suggesting that
these paradoxes enable military violence yet contribute to moral
injury. It concludes with an exploration of veteran poets and artists
who have found innovative ways to use language and other forms of
expression to critique military institutions and begin the process of
demilitarizing their psyches.
Les mer
Language and Military Necropolitics
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780197808030
Publisert
2025
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Oxford University Press Academic US
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter