Collection: Gender and New Wars

Research Article

Hybrid Warriors and the Formation of New War Masculinities: A Case Study of Indonesian Foreign Fighters

Authors:

Abstract

At the heart of new wars are economic structures, patterns of violence and formations of collective meaning, which appear to blend localised and globalised practices of gender. While new wars appear to mirror the kind of warrior masculinity that preceded the modern state, they also draw on new technologies and symbolism to give meaning to acts of war. In the case of foreign fighters, armed groups increasingly draw on globalised cultural products (film, electronic publications and images) to entice volunteers to fight on the battlefields of the 21st century. The use of masculine models and gendered discourses to recruit men to fight in these conflicts has been well studied. However, the process through which ‘local’ and ‘global’ practices of gender are blended by highly mobile fighters to forge the practices of new war has received far less attention. 

Drawing on the notion of cultural hybridity, this article asks how interactions between different configurations of gender make new wars possible. To do this, it empirically explores encounters between notions of militarised manhood through the lives of four Indonesian former foreign fighters. By utilising life history interviews, this article makes the case that the masculinity of these ‘new warriors’ relied on the tensions between, and synthesis of, anti-colonial notions of organised violence that are rooted in Indonesian history and globalised jihadi discourse on war.

  • Year: 2018
  • Volume: 7 Issue: 1
  • Page/Article: 16
  • DOI: 10.5334/sta.633
  • Submitted on 1 Mar 2018
  • Accepted on 18 Jun 2018
  • Published on 22 Aug 2018
  • Peer Reviewed