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The Body of War: Media, Ethnicity, and Gender in the Break-Up of Yugoslavia
Contributor(s): Zarkov, Dubravka (Author)
ISBN: 0822339552     ISBN-13: 9780822339557
Publisher: Duke University Press
OUR PRICE:   $97.80  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: September 2007
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Temporarily out of stock - Will ship within 2 to 5 weeks
Annotation: "Theoretically sophisticated and passionately argued, "The Body of War" shows how women's (and men's) bodies are implicated in the war in former Yugoslavia and its aftermath. Dubravka Zarkov courageously goes where others have feared to tread, rejecting too-easy assumptions that this was just a conflict between ethnic groups. Her book is a 'must read' for anyone interested in the ways gender and sexuality intersect to produce differences in ethnicity, thereby creating the pretext and the context for conflict and war."--Kathy Davis, author of "The Making of" Our Bodies, Ourselves: "How Feminism Travels across Borders"

"Dubravka Zarkov's remarkable book brings new insights to bear on the feminist theorizing of war. Nuanced, complex, lucid, and empirically grounded, Zarkov's powerful combination of the insider's understanding, passion, and emotional attachment with the academic's distance and rigor, makes this a hard-to-put-down read."--Urvashi Butalia, author of "The Other Side of Silence: Voices from the Partition of India"

Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Gender Studies
- Social Science | Media Studies
- Social Science | Ethnic Studies - General
Dewey: 949.703
LCCN: 2007008328
Series: Next Wave
Physical Information: 296 pages
Themes:
- Chronological Period - 1980's
- Chronological Period - 1990's
- Cultural Region - Balkan
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
In The Body of War, Dubravka Zarkov analyzes representations of female and male bodies in the Croatian and Serbian press in the late 1980s and in the early 1990s, during the war in which Yugoslavia disintegrated. Zarkov proposes that the Balkan war was not a war between ethnic groups; rather, ethnicity was produced by the war itself. Zarkov explores the process through which ethnicity was generated, showing how lived and symbolic female and male bodies became central to it. She does not posit a direct causal relationship between hate speech published in the press during the mid-1980s and the acts of violence in the war. Instead, she argues that both the representational practices of the "media war" and the violent practices of the "ethnic war" depended on specific, shared notions of femininity and masculinity, norms of (hetero)sexuality, and definitions of ethnicity.

Tracing the links between the war and press representations of ethnicity, gender, and sexuality, Zarkov examines the media's coverage of two major protests by women who explicitly identified themselves as mothers, of sexual violence against women and men during the war, and of women as militants. She draws on contemporary feminist analyses of violence to scrutinize international and local feminist writings on the war in former Yugoslavia. Demonstrating that some of the same essentialist ideas of gender and sexuality used to produce and reinforce the significance of ethnic differences during the war often have been invoked by feminists, she points out the political and theoretical drawbacks to grounding feminist strategies against violence in ideas of female victimhood.