Return to search

Gender and the homoerotic logic of torture at Abu Ghraib

The focus of this dissertation is a social and cultural theoretical analysis of the
empirical data regarding the prison abuse that occurred at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq by
American forces. I provide the following: an examination of the photographs of abuse
that were leaked to the press in the fall of 2003; an analysis of both Lynndie England’s
and Sabrina Harman’s courts-martial (two of the “rotten apples”); a discussion of the
body associated with punishment and torture, and also as marked in ways of
identification; and an assessment of additional representations regarding prisoner abuse
at Abu Ghraib. Throughout this analysis, I use gender as a lens to understand Abu
Ghraib and the subsequent courts-martial. It is important to note that I gained access to
and was intimately involved as a graduate researcher for Dr. Stjepan G. Mestrovic, an
expert for the defense, and experienced the events of the trials themselves, first-hand and
during closed counsel and open session.
The empirical data provided is drawn primarily from first-hand qualitative
research that involved participant-observation of two trials, interaction with soldiers and officers, and analysis of both documents pertaining to the trial as well as the photographs
of abuse themselves, among other things. I incorporate cultural studies, feminist and
sociological theory (modern and postmodern), and feminist philosophy so as to provide a
theoretical analysis of the abuse at Abu Ghraib and the subsequent courts-martial
focused on gender and sexuality.
The result of this dissertation is a social and cultural theoretical analysis of the
empirical data regarding the prison abuse that occurred at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq by
American forces, where women, gender, and sexuality are shown to be important criteria
for examination. Specifically, the results of this project highlight areas that current
analyses of the abuse at Abu Ghraib have left out: how women fit into American
military politics, how gender functions as power within the military, how gender is
socially constructed in the military in terms of heterosexuality, and how both gender and
sexuality are used as weapons by the American military. This kind of examination is
useful in future policy considerations for the military and for detainee treatment, where
analyses of women, gender, sexuality, and power have been so far neglected in any
serious way, and even by sociologists Phillip Zimbardo and the application of his
Stanford Prison Study to the events of Abu Ghraib.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:tamu.edu/oai:repository.tamu.edu:1969.1/ETD-TAMU-1617
Date15 May 2009
CreatorsCaldwell, Ryan Ashley
ContributorsMestrovic, Stjepan
Source SetsTexas A and M University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeBook, Thesis, Electronic Dissertation, text
Formatelectronic, application/pdf, born digital

Page generated in 0.0023 seconds