Iraq in Wartime: Soldiering, Martyrdom, and Remembrance
Cambridge University Press, 4/8/2013
EAN 9780521711531, ISBN10: 0521711533
Paperback, 298 pages, 15 x 2.3 x 2.3 cm
Language: English
When US-led forces invaded Iraq in 2003, they occupied a country that had been at war for 23 years. Yet in their attempts to understand Iraqi society and history, few policy makers, analysts and journalists took into account the profound impact that Iraq's long engagement with war had on the Iraqis' everyday engagement with politics, the business of managing their daily lives, and their cultural imagination. Drawing on government documents and interviews, Dina Rizk Khoury traces the political, social and cultural processes of the normalization of war in Iraq during the last twenty-three years of Ba'thist rule. Khoury argues that war was a form of everyday bureaucratic governance and examines the Iraqi government's policies of creating consent, managing resistance and religious diversity, and shaping public culture. Coming on the tenth anniversary of the US-led invasion of Iraq, this book tells a multilayered story of a society in which war has become the norm.
1. Introduction
2. A brief history of Iraq's wars under the Ba'th
3. The internal front
making the war routine
4. Battle fronts
war and insurgency
5. Things fall apart
the First Gulf War and its aftermath
6. War's citizens, war's families
7. Memory for the future
soldiering and the war experience
8. Commemorating the dead
9. Postscript.