Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 June 2025
Despite strong opposition within the army and society, the Women’s Army Auxiliary Corps was created in 1942. Although segregated, it attracted many African-American women in search of income, emancipation or recognition of their contribution to the nation. The first two black companies were assigned to Huachuca to take over bureaucratic duties and traditionally female tasks. They were welcomed both as rivals and as possible sexual partners. Most of them turned this experience into an opportunity to assert their political, professional, and sexual agency. Their photographic and written documentation of their military experience at the fort offers a unique female gaze on the infantrymen’s training experience.
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