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Conscription, Family, and the Modern State: A Comparative Study of France and the United States

Conscription, Family, and the Modern State: A Comparative Study of France and the United States

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Professor Dorit Geva
Cambridge University Press, 8/12/2013
EAN 9781107024984, ISBN10: 1107024986

Hardcover, 280 pages, 22.8 x 15.2 x 2.1 cm
Language: English

The development of modern military conscription systems is usually seen as a response to countries' security needs, and as reflection of national political ideologies like civic republicanism or democratic egalitarianism. This study of conscription politics in France and the United States in the first half of the twentieth century challenges such common sense interpretations. Instead, it shows how despite institutional and ideological differences, both countries implemented conscription systems shaped by political and military leaders' concerns about how taking ordinary family men for military service would affect men's presumed positions as heads of families, especially as breadwinners and figures of paternal authority. The first of its kind, this carefully researched book combines an ambitious range of scholarly traditions and offers an original comparison of how protection of men's household authority affected one of the paradigmatic institutions of modern states.

Part I. Conscription, Familial Authority, and State Modernity in Modern France
1. Nationalized coercion, familial authority, and the père de famille in nineteenth-century France
2. Conscription, pronatalism, and decline of familial sovereignty in the early Third Republic
3. The famille nombreuse versus the security state in interwar France
Part II. The Draft, Familial Authority, and State Modernity in the United States
4. Breadwinning, selective service, and the First World War draft
5. The father draft crisis and the Second World War
6. Conclusion
familial authority and state modernity past and present.

'Military conscription is a charged issue that dramatically brings to the fore the complex understandings of rights and responsibilities that make up modern citizenship. In this important study Dorit Geva compares conscription - and claims for exemption from it - in two paradigmatic modern nations, France and the United States. Sharing revolutionary traditions, the two countries arrived at different systems of conscription, but through two world wars struggled over similar core ideas about what it means to be a citizen, to be male, and to have family as well as national obligations. The study casts light not only on the gendered role of military service in citizenship but on core ideas about fairness, obligation, and sacrifice.' Craig Calhoun, Director, London School of Economics and Political Science

'Soldiering and fathering - the 'two sides of masculine citizenship' in the modern state - are at odds. If men soldier, they aren't around to support - and rule - their families. If they father, they are less available to fight. How modernizing states in France and the United States negotiated these tensions is the subject of this fascinating book, which analyzes the rise and decline of family-based exemptions to military conscription as well as women's rights in family law. By showing how citizenship is gendered for men as well as women, Geva breathes fresh air into the study of gender and the state.' Mala Htun, University of New Mexico