Pathways to Pacifism and Antiwar Activism among U.S. Veterans: The Role of Moral Identity in Personal Transformation

Author:   Julie Putnam Hart ,  Anjel N. Stough-Hunter
Publisher:   Lexington Books
ISBN:  

9781498538657


Pages:   214
Publication Date:   07 February 2020
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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Pathways to Pacifism and Antiwar Activism among U.S. Veterans: The Role of Moral Identity in Personal Transformation


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Author:   Julie Putnam Hart ,  Anjel N. Stough-Hunter
Publisher:   Lexington Books
Imprint:   Lexington Books
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 1.60cm , Length: 22.50cm
Weight:   0.327kg
ISBN:  

9781498538657


ISBN 10:   1498538657
Pages:   214
Publication Date:   07 February 2020
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

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Through in-depth interviews of U.S. veterans who have become antiwar activists, Hart and Stough-Hunter make three important contributions to an informed citizenry: 1) empathy for the trauma many of our veterans have experienced in serving our country; 2) an interpretive analysis of sociological identity theory to help us understand how the processes of moral injury, betrayal, religious reorientation, and education contribute to identity transformation; and 3) practical recommendations for the U.S. military and faith communities to foster healing and reintegrate veterans into civilian life.--Duane K. Friesen, emeritus, Bethel College (KS) An important, well-researched study explaining why and how some of us who serve in the military choose to speak out against war and in the process gain a stronger sense of personal identity and life purpose.--David Cortright, University of Notre Dame In this book, Julie Putnam Hart and Anjel N. Stough-Hunter combine to provide perspective, theory, and findings rarely available to us as citizens or as social scientists. As citizens, we read more than the stories of former soldiers. Rather we have a detailed, poignant recounting of the wrenching, inner struggles for moral meaning by those who experienced combat. The authors deepen these individual stories by their rich development of identity theory and the various factors which contribute to the redefined pacifist beliefs to which these former combatants arrive. The book provides analysis that life-long pacifists, career military people, and social science will discuss for years to come.--George A. Lopez, University of Notre Dame Reading this book may revive your faith in the possibility of individual change and the importance of education, inspiration, and social movements in helping us to be fully human and deeply humanized. Focused on the dramatic identity change that comes when a soldier realizes that war is not a path to peace, the stories unfolded in this book open for us important understanding of the catalysts for moral and political identity change. Some change quickly in the midst of brutal situations that expose deep moral conflict in war and the hierarchical power of patriarchy; for others it takes years of thinking and interacting with others to find their own understanding of war and its use changing. Appropriately, the authors show the complexity of the change process and the reader is left with a more genuine understanding of how a commitment to peace-making is built.--Lynne M. Woehrle, Mount Mary University


Reading this book may revive your faith in the possibility of individual change and the importance of education, inspiration, and social movements in helping us to be fully human and deeply humanized. Focused on the dramatic identity change that comes when a soldier realizes that war is not a path to peace, the stories unfolded in this book open for us important understanding of the catalysts for moral and political identity change. Some change quickly in the midst of brutal situations that expose deep moral conflict in war and the hierarchical power of patriarchy; for others it takes years of thinking and interacting with others to find their own understanding of war and its use changing. Appropriately, the authors show the complexity of the change process and the reader is left with a more genuine understanding of how a commitment to peace-making is built. -- Lynne M. Woehrle, Mount Mary University In this book, Julie Putnam Hart and Anjel N. Stough-Hunter combine to provide perspective, theory, and findings rarely available to us as citizens or as social scientists. As citizens, we read more than the stories of former soldiers. Rather we have a detailed, poignant recounting of the wrenching, inner struggles for moral meaning by those who experienced combat. The authors deepen these individual stories by their rich development of identity theory and the various factors which contribute to the redefined pacifist beliefs to which these former combatants arrive. The book provides analysis that life-long pacifists, career military people, and social science will discuss for years to come. -- George A. Lopez, University of Notre Dame An important, well-researched study explaining why and how some of us who serve in the military choose to speak out against war and in the process gain a stronger sense of personal identity and life purpose. -- David Cortright, University of Notre Dame Through in-depth interviews of U.S. veterans who have become antiwar activists, Hart and Stough-Hunter make three important contributions to an informed citizenry: 1) empathy for the trauma many of our veterans have experienced in serving our country; 2) an interpretive analysis of sociological identity theory to help us understand how the processes of moral injury, betrayal, religious reorientation, and education contribute to identity transformation; and 3) practical recommendations for the U.S. military and faith communities to foster healing and reintegrate veterans into civilian life. -- Duane K. Friesen, emeritus, Bethel College (KS)


Author Information

Julie Putnam Hart is associate professor of sociology at Ohio Dominican University. Anjel Stough-Hunter is assistant professor of sociology at Ohio Dominican University.

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