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Beyond the ritual of exchange the culture of alienation shared between soldiers along the Rappahannock during the winter of 1862-63 /Thompson, Lauren Kristin. January 1900 (has links)
Thesis (M.A.)--West Virginia University, 2010. / Title from document title page. Document formatted into pages; contains iii, 55 p. Includes abstract. Includes bibliographical references (p. 52-55).
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Service Matters: The Influence of Military Service on Political Behavior, Ideology and AttitudesJohnson, Catherine L. 08 1900 (has links)
The objective of this research is to explore the influence of military service on political behaviors and attitudes. Existing studies of the military have long recognized the existence of a predominantly conservative political ideology with a resulting propensity for strong Republican Party support within the military community, but have failed to explain the likely causal mechanism for this. Drawing on multiple sources of data from the 2008 Presidential election cycle, I utilized a descriptive analysis of campaign contribution data and bivariate and multivariate analyses of data from the 2008 Military Times Survey and the 2008 American National Election Survey. Much of the data also permitted me to analyze the effect of an individual's service branch on their attitudes as well. I examined the behavior and attitudes of the military across several dimensions, including candidate support and positions on policies of particular relevance to the military, including the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. This analysis found that people who serve in the military tend to be conservative but in many ways their political attitudes are reflective of those of the general population. An individual's race, ethnicity and gender appear to have more influence than military factors, with the exception of service in the Marine Corps, on ideology, partisan identification and policy preferences.
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"Life Holders"Irvin, William Ross 05 1900 (has links)
Life Holders is a collection of personal essays reflecting on my interactions with others concerning my military service.
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The Horse LatitudesRobinson, Matthew Dean 08 June 2015 (has links)
The Horse Latitudes is a collection of stories that documents one infantry squad's time in Baghdad, Iraq. The missions are long stretches of boredom, broken up by flashes of violence. The single sniper shot fired. An IED loosely buried in the roadside, waiting. A schoolyard of kids throwing fist-sized rocks at gun-trucks. The enemy is vast and changing. The downtime is a combination of homesickness, RPGs, and mortar fire. These men suffer through the war, heat, and each other.
These stories look into the fire-fights and their aftermath to get to soldiers' struggles within themselves: how to fight a faceless enemy, what it means to serve, how one soldiers, what makes a man, what makes a good man, what will it mean to die here, and what does it mean not to. This collection dismisses what we think we know about war -- violence, camaraderie, masculinity, enemy, victory -- in order to tell a harder, truer story.
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"Cousins in Arms" : experience and the formation of a British-American identity among regular and provincial soldiers during the Seven Years' War /Agostini, Thomas, January 2002 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Lehigh University, 2002. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 338-395).
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Stressors, resources, perception, and adaptation among military women during deploymentMawdsley, Jennifer Renee 04 November 2003 (has links)
This study explored factors that lead to adaptation among married women in
the military during the stressor of deployment. The Double ABCX Model of Family
Stress and Adaptation (McCubbin & Patterson, 1 983a, 1 983b, 1 983c) provided a
strong theoretical model for this study, on which the empirical model for this study
was based. In this study's empirical model, the variables that led to adaptation include
the stressor event of military deployment, pile-up of demands (marital pile-up, family
pile-up, financial pile-up, and job pile-up), resources (personal resources, family
system resources, and social support resources), and perception (perception of
deployment and perception of all). The 1999-2000 United States Air Force
Community Needs Assessment was analyzed using Structural Equation Modeling and
Multiple Hierarchical Regression.
The Structural Equation Modeling Analysis did not yield a path model and a
Multiple Hierarchical Regression was executed in order to determine which variables
in the path model contribute to adaptation. In this analysis, the independent variables
were entered according to the theoretical consideration of the Double ABCX Model of
Family Stress and Adaptation (McCubbin & Patterson, 1983a, 1983b, 1983c) and the
proposed path model. The results Multiple Hierarchical Regression indicate that pileup
of demands and resources provided a significant contribution to adaptation.
However, deployment and perception did not contribute to the variance in adaptation,
which was incongruent to previous findings.
The most significant limitation of the study is the disadvantages of conducting
a secondary analysis since measures available are less than ideal for the variables in
the model. There were several benefits of the study, including the inclusion of women
in the military, improvement of the Double ABCX Model of Family Stress and
Adaptation (McCubbin & Patterson, 1983a, 1983b, 1983c), and potential early
evaluation and intervention of families during periods of stress. Future research is
indicated, focusing on extended deployments, qualitative studies exploring the role of
perception in adaptation, other understudied population in the military (civilian
husbands, men in the military, and dual military couples), and additional model
improvement. / Graduation date: 2004
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Congruence of Multi-level Perceptions Over the Length of Marriage and Marital Adjustment in Air Force CouplesCone, Diane 08 1900 (has links)
Spousal congruence at multiple levels of perception was examined in relationship to marital adjustment. Subjects were 164 active duty and retired Air Force married couples.
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Veteran : a narrative nonfiction account of a warrior's journey toward healingHowell, Marshall Z. 09 June 2011 (has links)
Literature review -- Methodology -- Body of project : Fire in the belly. / Dept. of Journalism
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Co-Occurrence of Rape Myth Acceptance and Intolerant Attitudes in a Military SampleHoltz, Pamela M. 12 1900 (has links)
Sexual trauma within the military is a widespread issue, and rape myth acceptance has been shown to contribute to its prevalence. Given that the military culture has been shown to lend itself to hypermasculinity and traditional gender role adherence, both of which facilitate aggression toward women, this effect warrants investigation within a military sample. The present study replicated and expanded upon Aosved and Long's (2006) study examining 85 veteran and active duty military members' responses on the Illinois Rape Myth Acceptance Scale, Attitudes Toward Women Scale (short form), Neosexism Scale, Male Role Norms Inventory (short form), Modern and Old Fashioned Racism Scale, Modern Homophobia Scale, a modified version of the Economic Belief Scale, Fraboni Scale of Ageism, Religious Intolerance Scale, and the Marlowe–Crowne Social Desirability Scale (short form). Findings provide support for the co-occurrence of rape myth acceptance with intolerant attitudes, including sexism, hypermasculine gender role ideology, racism, sexual prejudice, classism, ageism, and religious intolerance, both individually and collectively. These results provide insight into the functioning of intolerant attitudes within a military sample, and provide important insight for future research addressing the association between rape myth acceptance and rape proclivity and the perpetration of military sexual assault.
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Neuropsychological Functioning in Active Duty Soldiers with Physical and/or Psychological TraumaKlein, Robert S. 12 1900 (has links)
This quasi-experimental study investigates neuropsychological functioning differences between 63 active duty soldiers who were placed into three groups (MTBI, PTSD, control) to provide better information for differentiating PTSD and MTBI. The ANAM and MicroCog were utilized to measure psychomotor speed, memory, and attention. Participants with PTSD performed worse on most measures of psychomotor speed and attention, and endorsed more symptoms of depression and anxiety when compared to MTBI and control participants. Further, attention appears to be the best cognitive domain for differentiating PTSD from MTBI, whereas memory variables did not differentiate these groups. Clinical and research implications of these findings are discussed.
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