“An important work. The stories of Lily, Alexa, and Vikrant are extraordinarily compelling. By the time I arrived at the conclusions, I felt I knew them personally and had developed a sense of the lived experience of immigrant life in the military and after military service, including its complex trade-offs for socioeconomic mobility. We clearly need an intersectional lens to disentangle these experiences and their connection to citizenship.”--Noelle Brigden, author of The Migrant Passage: Clandestine Journeys from Central America
“Cristina Dragomir masterfully unveils her own trajectory, and that of three immigrants from three different locations, to investigate the role identities and their intersections employ in a soldier’s naturalization progress. By conjoining theoretical and historical analysis with life stories, Dragomir’s Making the Immigrant Soldier brings the power of her writing to make you hear, to feel, and ultimately to see, by using qualitative and interpretive methods to full force. Her story speaks to our capacity to understand the world of the immigrant at a time when the struggle to become citizens is most acute. Dragomir offers a brilliant micro-sociological analysis in her insightful ethnographic exploration. A must read for social scientists, policy makers, and everyday citizens eager to experience firsthand the craft of engaged ethnography. This is essentially the classic American story, since race, ethnicity, gender, and class are all represented. With painstaking rigor, Dragomir brings years of fieldwork to fruition, revealing how the transformation to soldier is a hazardous, arduous journey, full of fellowship, wonder, and mystery.”--Terry Williams, author of Harlem Supers: The Social Life of a Community in Transition
"Dragomir’s accounts are vast and sociologically rich" --Contemporary Sociology