
@article{ref1,
title="“All They Understand Is Force”: Debating Culture in Operation Iraqi Freedom",
journal="American anthropologist",
year="2008",
author="Brown, Keith",
volume="110",
number="4",
pages="443-453",
abstract="ABSTRACT  Drawing entirely on public, open sources, in this article I trace the recent development of U.S. military understandings and uses of cultural knowledge. Military education, training, and operations reveal complexity and diversity that demands empirical study. In particular, I locate in Operation Iraqi Freedom (2003–present) an internal, critical theoretical disagreement between a model of culture as a static, or slow-moving, property of a constructed “other,” embraced by mainstream thought in the U.S. Army, and a competing sense of cultural process as dynamic, interactive, and emergent, emphasized by Special Forces and the Marine Corps. This disagreement feeds off of and into longer-running debates within U.S. military circles, demonstrating that the U.S. military's engagement with the concept of “culture” is far from monolithic: different services’ approaches are shaped by their own histories, driving rival emphases on weaponizing culture and culturalizing warriors.<p />",
language="",
issn="0002-7294",
doi="10.1111/j.1548-1433.2008.00077.x",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-1433.2008.00077.x"
}