Conscription, family, and the modern state : a comparative study of France and the United States /
"This book compares how the American draft system and the French conscription system came to be"--
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Cambridge :
Cambridge University Press,
2013.
|
Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Cover
- Conscription, Family, and the Modern State
- Title
- Copyright
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction Conscription, Familial Authority, and State Modernity in France and the United States
- Max Weber, Familial Authority, and Modern Western Political Development
- Feminist State Theory
- Going Back, Going Forward
- Bridging Feminists, Weberians, and Foucauldians
- The Two Exceptions? Tracing Similarities and Differences
- 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
- Patriarchal Power and Familial Sovereignty in the Revolutionary Era
- Napoleonic Reforms and Intensification of Paternal Power
- Napoleonic Reform, Conscription, and the Contradictions between State and Paternal Authority
- Nineteenth Century Continuities
- 2 Conscription, Pronatalism, and Decline of Familial Sovereignty in the Early Third Republic
- The French Third Republic: A Laboratory for French Republicanism
- Gender in the Early Third Republic: Republicanism, Depopulation, and the Père de Famille
- The Père de Famille
- The Third Republic and the Nation in Arms
- The 1905 Recruitment Law: Military Service Is "Equal for All"
- The Depopulation Crisis and the Challenge to Familial Authority
- Wartime Mobilization and Demobilization
- 3 The Famille Nombreuse versus the Security State in Interwar France
- Depopulation, Gender Backlash, and Familial Authority
- The Familles Nombreuses in Postwar Army Reform
- Depopulation Is War: The 1928 Recruitment Bill
- The Années Creuses and the Road to Total War
- Familial Authority and the Specter of Total War
- PART II THE DRAFT, FAMILIAL AUTHORITY, AND STATE MODERNITY IN THE UNITED STATES
- 4 Breadwinning, Selective Service, and the World War I Draft.
- World War I Precedents
- Coverture, Household Authority, and Prewar Transformations
- The Preparedness Movement and the Eruption of World War I
- Voluntarism's Extravagance and the Birth of Selective Service
- The First Draft: Approaching Each Case with Sympathy and Commonsense
- The New Classification Scheme
- Class I
- Class II
- Class III
- Class IV
- Class V
- Confronting a "Marriage Epidemic"
- Race, Gender, and Selective Preservation of the Patriarchal Household
- Selectively Invasive: The World War I Draft Compared to Great Britain, Canada, and New Zealand
- 5 The Father Draft Crisis and World War II
- The Early World War II Draft: One Board Literalistic, One Board Liberalistic, One Board Middle Ground
- The War Manpower Commission and the Decline of Paternal Sovereignty
- Work or Fight (or Father)
- More Paternalism, Less Executive Authority
- Race, Gender, and the Family/State Nexus Transformed
- Selective Service and the Quasi-Autonomous Family
- Conclusion Familial Authority and State Modernity Past and Present
- Of Feminists and Bellicists
- The Promise of a Feminist Historical Sociology
- From the Past to the Present
- The Demise of the Mass Army and the Family/State Nexus Today
- Bibliography
- 1. French Primary Sources
- Monographs
- Newspapers
- French Parliamentary Materials
- 2. American Primary Sources
- Archival Material from the United States National Archives and Records Administration (NARA)
- Newspapers and Journals
- Publications of the Selective Service System
- Congressional and Executive Documents
- 3. Books, Articles, Theses, and Essays
- Index.