World War On Women Chapter 3 Analysis

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Enloe believes that the violence and neglect of women has become a cultural norm, but no one dares to ask the question “why?” because they are afraid. Instead of being afraid, we must use our “feminist curiosity,” to ask questions. According to Enloe this is “not a passive endeavor,” and any resistance against it is meant to demean woman. Both globalization and militarization are not only complex but they are continuously occurring across the world. Simultaneously, they are causing a depletion of human nature. While some are more apparently affected than others, globalization and militarization go hand in hand with the condition of civilians all over the world. We must use Enloe’s ideology of feminist curiosity to examine the effects of globalization …show more content…

There is an increase in sexual violence on women during war, but long after the war is over the horrifying battle continues. Violence against women continues getting worse because when the men return from war they still have a militarized ideology or suffer from the affects of traumatic events. So if there is no enemy to attack, then women are usually the inopportune targets. Jones uses chapter 3 to discuss the women that she encountered while she volunteered in Sierra Leone, West Africa which was ravaged by rebel occupants. Gaddafi and his followers terrorized and brutalized civilians with torture, rape, and murder. He created camps and recruited boy soldiers who eventually became brutal commanders as well. One of Gaddafi's soldiers Sankoh founded the Revolutionary United Front of Sierra Leone (RUF) which is the most notorious guerrilla unit in the region. They forced fathers “to rape their own daughters; brothers forced to rape their sisters; boy soldiers gang raped old women, then chop off their arms” (Jones). After the war, the region would never be the same. Thousands of people died, and those that survived were left disabled, diseased or pregnant by their

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