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CALL FOR PAPERS



Soldiering:

The Afterlife of a Modern Experience



The Annual Interdisciplinary Humanities Graduate Student Conference

The Mahindra Humanities Center at Harvard University, April 23-24, 2011

Soldiering has long been considered a central organizing experience of  
modern life. With the invention of conscription in the 1680s, the  
consequent multiplication of national standing-armies, and the  
coupling of soldiering with citizenship, the individual and  
aristocratic warrior was replaced by the democratic and collective  
figure of “the soldier of the revolution.” His body no longer marked  
by the natural signs of strength, courage and pride, the soldier had  
become, by the late eighteenth century, something that can be made.  
Disciplined en masse through standardized military programs that  
mimicked the constancy of the factory, soldiers were not only  
manufactured; for two centuries they themselves embodied the labor  
power envisioned in manufacturing new political orders at home and  
across the vast imperial landscape. The two world wars, quintessential  
displays of modern soldiering, were arguably also the last of their  
kind, and marked both the culmination and the end of soldiering as a  
near universal experience, social institution, and political  
subjectivity.

Juxtaposed with and against these historical prefigurations, this two- 
day conference wishes to examine the gradual disintegration of the  
Soldier-Subject in the postwar period and the ‘afterlife’ forms of  
modern soldiering, from the early days of the Cold War to the current  
manifestations of the ‘Global War on Terror’. What happens to  
soldiering when armies are privatized and corporations take over the  
state’s “dirty business of war”? When “irregular,” “asymmetric,” “low- 
intensity” warfare is the order of the day? When the once politically  
significant distinction between soldier and civilian is destabilized  
in the now prevalent theaters of “ethnic conflict”? When technical  
experts become soldiers and human soldiers are gradually replaced by  
technological systems, such as unmanned drones and armed robots? How  
have these contemporary forms of soldiering influenced social,  
economic and political realities? And how do they contribute to the  
increased ethical isolation of war and conflict?

We seek rich, rigorous graduate student contributions from across the  
academic spectrum and across historical periods. Through soldiering,  
this conference aims to provide a locus for rewriting conventional  
military and political histories, revisiting anthropological accounts  
of violence and the state, and expanding the definition of warfare –  
both temporally and spatially. Themes may include:

·       From “Cannon Fodder” to “Enhanced Survivability”: The Birth of  
the Vulnerable Soldier

·        ‘Shell-Shock,’ PTSD and Mental Preparedness: Trauma Culture  
and Its Aftermath

·       Army Alpha, Army Beta: Screening, Selection, and the Making of  
Military Kinds

·       From Ethical Lapses to Professional Failings: Soldiering as a  
Vocation

·       Enlightened Occupiers: From ‘Hearts and Minds’ to the Human  
Terrain Teams

·       Armies for Hire: Privatized Defense and Corporate Warfare

·       ‘Accidental Guerillas,’ Child-Soldiers, and Other Paramilitaries

·       International Soldiers: Military Humanitarianism, Peace Corps,  
and Human Rights Training

·       Identity Politics Goes to War: From ‘Blue Discharge’ to ‘Don’t  
Ask, Don’t Tell’ and Beyond

·       The Paris-Match Saluting “Negro” and Other Mythologies: the  
Soldier as Signifier

·       Reorganizing the Military-Industrial Complex: New Media and  
Warfare Simulation

The conference’s keynote speaker will be Sharon Ghamari-Tabrizi, an  
independent scholar, author of The Worlds of Herman Kahn: the  
Intuitive Science of Thermonuclear War (Harvard University Press,  
2005), and a specialist on the cultural history of American Cold War  
military science and technology.



Prospective participants are asked to write a 600 word abstract that  
outlines the paper’s topic, methodology, and argument, as well as how  
the prospective participant’s research interests relate to the theme  
of soldiering more generally. Participants will be notified by early  
March whether their paper has been accepted into the conference.  
Please note that participants may be eligible to receive full or  
partial stipends for transportation to the conference.



Abstract Submission Deadline: February 15, 2011

Abstracts can be uploaded on the conference website:  
isites.harvard.edu/soldieringconference

(under the “Submissions” tab). Please make sure to include the  
following information: full name, institutional affiliation, the title  
of your paper, and contact details.



---------------
Melissa Lo
History of Science
Harvard University
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424.229.2795