Title: Chapter 6 Middle-earth
1- Chapter 6Middle-earth Feminist Analysis of
Conflict
2What do gender-sensitive lenses tell us about war?
War depends on telling gendered war stories
based in a logic of protection, and on
silencing or deligitimizing stories that
challenge them
3Where are the women?
If women are present in the LOTR, their roles
tend to be minor
4What work is masculinity doing?
Strategies and relationships among the Fellowship
are highly masculinized
Members are all unmarried, and the group is
hierarchically structured
5How can the hero story be challenged?
The story of the LOTR is told from Frodos
perspective, but what about other narratives
which might be messier than Frodos view?
6Hobbits illustrate how gendered and hierarchical
relationships can perpetuate insecurity and
inequality for feminized dependents
7Eowyn and Merry emerge as unexpected heroes in
the Battle of Pelennor Fields
People who are not recognized as important
actually do influence key events in significant
ways
8Private politics are critical to the practice
and understanding of public politics
9Non-dominant perspectives have important and
underrecognized sources of wisdom
10World War 1 through a Gender-Sensitive Lens
11Gendered perceptions/assumptions influence how
war is conducted and how decisions about going to
war are made
12Aircraft battles were more chivalrous than
dropping bombs but the German squadron-style
combat was seen as cowardly
13Military leaders valued boldness, bravery,
strength and chivalry over defensive positioning,
balancing, patience and calculation
14Dehumanizing or feminizing enemies allows for
projecting of dominating relationships onto the
international relations between groups
15World War 1 was seen as a cure for societys ills
and a way to promote positive masculine values
16Masculinized, militarized nationalism promoted
beliefs that war would be quick and easy because
our men were superior
17Just warriors were called on to defend
defenseless women and children (beautiful
souls) from bad guys (barbaric Germans)
18The decision of potential recruits whether or not
to enlist was determined by their manliness
19The War in Iraq through a Gender-Sensitive Lens
20Marriage, sexual assault, prostitution, ethnic
politics, sexist economies more accurately and
clearly illuminate the causes, costs,
consequences and meanings of war
21Gendered militarization has an enormous impact on
society
22because beauty was subverting civic order
23Moral criteria identify when a just war may be
undertaken and how it may be fought
24Jus ad bellum(just reasons)
Jus in bello(just conduct)
Requires that war be fought only for reasons
characterized by right intention, just cause,
right authority, proportionality of ends, and for
last resort
Requires that war be conducted only when
noncombatants are insured immunity, and when wars
do more good than harm
25A redefinition of reasonable chance of success
should include Justice in the longer term during
and after war
26The political context that constructed and
sustained Iraq was gendered and unjust
Sanctions imposed before the war were
unjustly aimed at civilian targets
Post-war civil strife was the opposite of
a feminist understanding of what
success in Iraq would look like
27Gender-sensitive analysis recognizes the costs of
war that are often ignored