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Rachel Woodward

Researcher at Newcastle University

Publications -  85
Citations -  2174

Rachel Woodward is an academic researcher from Newcastle University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Memoir & Rurality. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 84 publications receiving 1958 citations. Previous affiliations of Rachel Woodward include Australian Department of Defence & University of Newcastle.

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Military Identities in the Situated Accounts of British Military Personnel

TL;DR: This article examined individual military identities as articulated by serving and former British military personnel and argued that military identity is a locally emergent phenomenon, constituted by members' concepts of their own identity.
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'It's a Man's Life!': Soldiers, masculinity and the countryside

TL;DR: This paper explored the relationship between soldiers, masculinity and the countryside, and suggested that this conceptualisation of the countryside contributes specifically to the construction of particular (hegemonic) notions of masculinity.
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Warrior Heroes and Little Green Men: Soldiers, Military Training, and the Construction of Rural Masculinities*

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine military masculinities as a form of rural masculinity and argue that one model of military masculinity, the warrior hero, acts as a dominant military construction of masculinity.

Warrior heroes and little green men: soldiers, military training and the construction of rural masculinities

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examine military masculinities as a form of rural masculinity and argue that one model of military masculinity, the warrior hero, acts as a dominant military construction of masculinity.
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From Military Geography to militarism's geographies: disciplinary engagements with the geographies of militarism and military activities

TL;DR: This paper reviewed contemporary approaches in Anglophone human geography to the geographical constitution and expression of militarism and military activities, and identified three main approaches are identified, namely, This paper.