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A teenage boy shamed into volunteering to fight isn’t a hero, he’s an exploited victim

March 16, 2015 by Inside MAN 7 Comments

Earlier this month an analysis of Royal Navy records revealed that more than 100,000 of the volunteers who enlisted to fight in WW1 were boys aged 14 to 17, too young to either fight or vote.

In addition to these boy sailors, as many as 250,000 underage recruits enlisted to the Army. Their service records showed that the younger the soldier, the more likely he was to be killed.

By any common moral standard – by which I mean precisely the same moral standard we use to judge the actions of gaolers who force-fed Suffragettes – you’d think we would say those boys were victims of brutal state-sanctioned exploitation and vicious gendered discrimination.

You would expect national outcry and soul searching into what callous insanity could have led both society and the government to divide a generation of children along gender lines and decide one half was worthy of protection and safety, while the other should be subjected to unimaginable brutality.

Sepia-tinted tragedy

Except the story barely raised a ripple in the sea of voices that make up the mainstream conversation about gender, a conversation which focuses almost exclusively on the problems men cause, rather than those they face.

As an added irony, the news that one third of WW1’s Navy volunteers were in fact boys, appeared just two days before International Women’s Day, a day on which the only permissible narrative about men is one that describes their power and privilege.

There have been a handful of articles and documentaries addressing the issue of WW1’s boy soldiers to mark the centenary of the war, but I’ve yet to see a single account that frames the issue as one of gendered discrimination, let alone express outrage at that injustice.

Instead, they fall into a cosy narrative of sepia-tinted tragedy and heroism – it’s terribly sad that all these young lads lost their lives, to be sure, but that’s just how it was then, don’t you know. And anyway the main thing to remember, with misty eyes, is what heroes they were.

Image: BBC

There are two things these articles always emphasise – that the boys were heroes and how enthusiastic they themselves had been to enlist. By the same token, there are two things that are always glossed over – the horror and terror of combat and the social pressure imposed on boys and young men to prove their manhood.

In other words, these reports employ pretty much exactly the same techniques that have always been used to disguise both the reality of war and the state coercion and social stigma that forces men to sign up for it.

But at the heart of this obfuscation and spin is the need to show these boys – boys who by today’s standards were too young to consent to sex, let alone make informed choices about going to war – ultimately made the decision to enlist of their own free will.

Rarely is there any mention of the psychological impact of the ever-present Kitchener’s finger, of the music hall propaganda songs, of the vicious shame of the White Feather, of the pride many parents took in being able to say their son was doing his bit, or of the girls giggling at the sight of young men in uniform.

Playground propaganda

I have a hunch why there is such reluctance to acknowledge the immense pressure these boys were under to sign up — it’s because that way both traditionalists and feminists get to hold on to their beliefs about men.

Traditionalists are able to maintain the idea that any right-thinking man and boy knows his duty as provider and protector, while feminists get to continue to perpetuate the myth that the history of gender politics can be reduced to one long saga of men’s agency and privilege.

Meanwhile, no-one is forced to confront the fact that virtually within living memory, Britain’s attitude to its boys was not so different to that of a Central African war lord.

One recent BBC documentary included a segment in which an actor read out extracts from a propaganda comic of the time, over a line-drawn image from the comic of a shell exploding in the middle of a make-shift football pitch.

“It would take a lot to put a British Tommy off his football. Here a German shell exploded right on the field of play. To show their contempt for the enemy’s fire, they continued their game.”

Kitchener’s finger

Incredibly, the segment was simply used as a colourful illustration of what one boy soldier asked for when he wrote home – a comic. Neither explicitly or implicitly did the programme question the messages or motives behind the comic, or how a diet of this kind of reading matter may have influenced boys to enlist.

(This, just to be clear, is the same BBC that regularly provides a platform for outrage over the harm caused to girls by half-naked women in Lads Mags.)

Another report in The Times, about the youngest soldier to have gone to the front – a 12-year-old boy who ended up fighting at the Battle of the Somme – emphasised how he and other underage boys managed to “trick” recruiting sergeants into believing that they were older than then they really were. Those poor recruiting sergeants, outwitted by children who were so determined to get to the front.

“What could have impelled a young boy to place himself in such danger?”, asks the article’s author, wide-eyed.

The real question is, why are we still so determined to pretend that when young men join the military, it has nothing whatsoever to do with what society expects of them.

By Dan Bell

If you liked this article and want to read more, follow us on Twitter @insideMANmag and Facebook

Also on insideMAN:

  • Why Kitchener’s finger gives me the arsehole
  • How local media shamed readers into fighting in WW1
  • The bravery and brutality of being a conscientious objector
  • Why does Sky’s comedy series ‘Chickens’ still think it’s funny to humiliate men who didn’t go to war?

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Filed Under: Men’s Issues Tagged With: Articles by Dan Bell, boy soldiers, Teenage Tommies, WW1, WW1 centenary

  • Nigel

    Dan you raise a really good point. I think at it’s root is the fact that it is all too easy to pursuade the young of an urgent need, one sufficient to need them to head to danger. 
    I have been struck by the very different reporting about the three “girls” who took themselves off to Syria and IS. And the three “teenagers”  caught in Turkey and sent home. Effectively the three young women are treated as victims and there are extensive reporting with and about their distraught  families. Public statements give them immunity from prosecution. Of course the young men were arrested, no one appears to question they chose to go and there is  no sympathetic coverage of the families. Clearly the press still subscribes to the view that “girls” are in the care of their families  and boys, well they’re able to choose and sometimes choose badly and face consequences.
    Some may recall the song “19” based on the average age at death of GIs in Vietnam. Really to fight wars it seems you have to get em young ( and male) perhaps before caution and reflection make regimentation harder. If young men were less easily persuaded how would the powerful build their armies? My father was “boy airman” enlisting just as ww2 started. Two years later at 19 he won the DFM. Recently I used the Internet looking for info. I found many men had won medals flying out of Lincolnshire. What shocked me was their ages, it turns out my father was no youthful fluke the very oldest officer was 24 most medals went to 19 to 21year olds. It seems convenient that male teenagers are clear eyed and able to make life changing choices but females need the protection of their loving family to stop them being victims , because they couldn’t possibly choose unwisely. How would we fill our armies if families could whisk the young soldiers back home . 
    As you say little has changed for the disposable sex. 

    • Inside MAN

      Thanks Nigel.

  • Healing Men

    These young boys and men weren’t “too young to vote” … “MEN” didn’t get the vote in the UK until 1918 – along with women … universal suffrage very willingly established by the men in parliament as a just and proper response to the wholesale and unprecedented carnage and costs (in all spheres) of WW1. The right to vote accompanying the responsibility to pay taxes and bear other costs and the duty imposed on men to defend and die for their country.

  • RV

    You are neglecting to point out that people left school at 14 and went out to work. Those who signed up at 14 years old, lied about their age, you had to be 18. Those discovered were sent back home. After the war in 1918 – Representation of the People Act extends vote to all men over 21 and most women over 30.
    The Kaiser was the enemy of modern democracy, and the aggressor in this terrible war. I am pleased and saddened that my great uncles fought and died in this war. Easy for people to be wise so many years later.

  • disqus_QL05BqU79X

    Here’s a nice little fact for you that may seem quaint at first, but has immeasurable depth:

    **The word ‘hero’ denotes a man prepared to sacrifice his life for the glory of the goddess Hera.**

    Id est, men have long been (and will always be) dispensable in protecting the honour and glory of women, givers of life. Without wishing to sound arch, or weird, etymology is an important area of study. When you learn where words come from and look at them dispassionately in historic context, you can see things for what they are. Ordinary men are expendable beyond their use as stock for breeding, provision and fighting – and if they refuse to accept this, they are shamed, shunned and/or killed. This is not news.

    We know that women give life and men protect life; it’s why nature has slowly wrought the physiological qualities we as humans have, but there is no real reason for the way we live as social creatures on this land today. We’re not under threat (not even the manufactured ones like ISIS), we have clean water and an almost endless supply of food. We do not need to perpetuate the subjugation of men this way any more. How much worse does it have to get before it gets better?

    • insideMAN

      That definition of the origins of the word “hero” is fascinating. Thanks.

      • disqus_QL05BqU79X

        You’re welcome. Pity that they don’t teach that to primary school children. Instead they’re taught the complete lie that Suffragettes died fighting for women to get the vote.

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