TY - JOUR
T1 - Militarized socialization, military service, and class reproduction
T2 - The experiences of Israeli soldiers
AU - Levy, Gal
AU - Sasson-Levy, Orna
PY - 2008/6
Y1 - 2008/6
N2 - Exploring the links between militarized socialization and social inequality in Israel, the authors aim to examine both the pattern of political socialization, which extols the role of the combat soldier as the emblem of the "good citizen," and the ways by which social agents themselves respond to this socialization. Although an all-encompassing phenomenon, the authors find militarized socialization is not equally "distributed" or "received." Rather, it reflects and reproduces the class and ethnic positions of its various recipients. Based on interviews with male soldiers in a wide range of military roles, the authors identify two types of responses to militarized socialization: (a) a dominant response of conformity and obedience, mainly expressed in the unquestioning acceptance of military service in a combat role, and (b) an ambivalent response, of simultaneous acceptance of and resistance to this ideal. In a more comparative vein, the authors argue that military service does not simply reproduce ethnic and class inequalities but rather, by molding the soldiers' conceptions of citizenship, is still a powerful mechanism of legitimizing a hegemonic militarized and class-differentiated social order.
AB - Exploring the links between militarized socialization and social inequality in Israel, the authors aim to examine both the pattern of political socialization, which extols the role of the combat soldier as the emblem of the "good citizen," and the ways by which social agents themselves respond to this socialization. Although an all-encompassing phenomenon, the authors find militarized socialization is not equally "distributed" or "received." Rather, it reflects and reproduces the class and ethnic positions of its various recipients. Based on interviews with male soldiers in a wide range of military roles, the authors identify two types of responses to militarized socialization: (a) a dominant response of conformity and obedience, mainly expressed in the unquestioning acceptance of military service in a combat role, and (b) an ambivalent response, of simultaneous acceptance of and resistance to this ideal. In a more comparative vein, the authors argue that military service does not simply reproduce ethnic and class inequalities but rather, by molding the soldiers' conceptions of citizenship, is still a powerful mechanism of legitimizing a hegemonic militarized and class-differentiated social order.
KW - Citizenship
KW - Class and ethnic inequality
KW - Israel
KW - Militarized socialization
KW - Military service
KW - Political socialization
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=45449089494&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1525/sop.2008.51.2.349
DO - 10.1525/sop.2008.51.2.349
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AN - SCOPUS:45449089494
SN - 0731-1214
VL - 51
SP - 349
EP - 374
JO - Sociological Perspectives
JF - Sociological Perspectives
IS - 2
ER -