ABSTRACT

American Soldiers in Iraq offers a unique snapshot of American soldiers in Iraq, analyzing their collective narratives in relation to the military sociology tradition.

Grounded in a century-long tradition of sociology offering a window into the world of American soldiers, this volume serves as a voice for their experience. It provides the reader with both a generalized and a deep view into a major social institution in American society and its relative constituents-the military and soldiers-during a war. In so doing, the book gives a backstage insight into the U.S. military and into the experiences and attitudes of soldiers during their most extreme undertaking-a forward deployment in Iraq while hostilities are intense.

The author triangulates qualitative and quantitative field data collected while residing with soldiers in Iraq, comparing and contrasting various groups from officers to enlisted soldiers, as well as topics such as boredom, morale, preparation for war, day-to-day life in Iraq, attitudes, women soldiers, communication with the home-front, "McDonaldization" of the force, civil-military fusion, the long-term impact of war, and, finally, the socio-demographics of fatalities. The heart of American Soldiers in Iraq captures the experiences of American soldiers deployed to Operation Iraqi Freedom at the height of the conflict in a way unprecedented in the literature to date.

This book will be essential reading for students of military studies, sociology, American politics and the Iraq War, as well as being of much interest to informed general readers.

chapter 1|13 pages

Introduction

American soldiers

chapter 2|16 pages

Creeping banality

The boredom factor and American soldiers

chapter 3|15 pages

Troop morale

The social psychology of American soldiers

chapter 4|12 pages

Fusion and fissure

American soldier attitudes toward social issues

chapter 5|10 pages

Over there

American soldier attitudes toward foreign issues

chapter 6|20 pages

McSoldiers

Human tools or innovative professionals?

chapter 7|16 pages

Real G. I. Janes

American female soldiers in war

chapter 8|11 pages

Baghdad calling

Soldier communications with other fronts

chapter 9|16 pages

Turning point

Iraq as a change agent for American soldiers

chapter 10|21 pages

Death in the American ranks

Class war or equal opportunity

chapter 11|11 pages

Conclusion

Soldiers, minds, and American society