Breaking the Binaries in Security Studies
A Gendered Analysis of Women in Combat
Ayelet Harel-Shalev and Shir Daphna-Tekoah
Reviews and Awards
Winner, 2021 Giueseppe Caforio Best Book Award, European Research Group on Military and Society
"This book fills a gap in knowledge about the roles and experiences of women combatants and raises important questions for future research in international relations, gender and militarism, violence, and critical military studies." - Wendy M. Christensen, Contemporary Sociology
"This brilliantly illuminating book challenges a series of familiar binaries in a highly original way. The authors distinguish multiple voices, and by doing so, arrive at a new and far more nuanced understanding not only of gender but also of security and insecurity, conflict, and trauma. Written by two of Israel's most courageous thinkers and foremost feminist scholars, this is a vibrant and vital addition in a wide range of fields" - Carol Gilligan, author of In a Different Voice and Why Does Patriarchy Persist?
"The authors enter unexplored areas in this book. Rather than the oftenstudied topic of women and peace, this work looks at women combat soldiers. Moreover, by employing a psycho-linguistic analysis, placed within the framework of feminist international relations studies, the authors probe the subtleties and depth of gender responses in a situation of ongoing warfare. This is a very worthwhile, and enlightening, treatment covering new ground."" - Galia Golan,, Darwin Professor emerita, Hebrew University of Jerusalem
"This fascinatingly graphic book is sure to enliven our current conversations about security— what is security, how do we promote it, what undermines it. These wonderfully diverse narratives from women in military combat roles provoke fresh thoughts about the tangled relationships between security, violence, silence, masculinities, femininities, peace, and militarism."" - Cynthia Enloe, author of Globalization and Militarism
"Breaking the Binaries in Security Studies upends multiple conventions that deserve to be questioned. The book interrogates simple gender dichotomies as well as those that contrast war versus peace, combatant versus victim, and state versus society. Ayelet HarelShalev and Shir DaphnaTekoah present gripping material drawn from interviews with 100 women who served as Israel Defense Force combatants or combat support personnel. An invaluable contribution to feminist research, this study is among the first to illuminate how combat soldiers cope with trauma in a strong military and, later on, as civilians in a highly militarized society" - Sylvia Bashevkin, author of Women as Foreign Policy Leaders