Synthesizing Super Soldiers: Military Medicine in Fiction and Reality Cover Image

Synthesizing Super Soldiers: Military Medicine in Fiction and Reality
Synthesizing Super Soldiers: Military Medicine in Fiction and Reality

Author(s): Simon Harold Walker
Subject(s): Studies of Literature, Military policy, Health and medicine and law
Published by: Central European University
Keywords: military medicine; masculinity; Doctor Who; Firefly; Captain America;

Summary/Abstract: In the year 2013, during the 50th Anniversary of Doctor Who, the title character finally faced the demons of his past that the series had been teasing for almost a decade. In a retrospective reveal the Doctor was depicted as rejecting his eight incarnation in favour of a crueller militaristic version to allow him to battle in the Time War. Previously the heroic benevolent explorer, the character’s tenure as the combative ‘War Doctor’ demanded an identity change that had psychological ramifications for nearly 1300 years across the Doctor’s ‘final’ three regenerations. While fictional, the Doctor’s transformation and subsequent trauma are a recurrent aspect of early 20th century military indoctrination and readjustment. As a result of the First World War, civilian combatants were forced to sacrifice their agency and personal morality to become soldiers. The medicalisation of the body for military purposes was a hallmark of the twentieth century. This article investigates this similarity between fiction and reality in relation to military medicine, and the physical and psychological impacts of such, by comparing popular science fictions such as Doctor Who, Marvel’s Captain America, and Joss Whedon’s Firefly to the reality of military service, training, and experimentation in the twentieth century.

  • Issue Year: 6/2019
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 1-22
  • Page Count: 22
  • Language: English