
Contents
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A Breed Apart A Breed Apart
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“The Camelot of Aeronautical Engineering” “The Camelot of Aeronautical Engineering”
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A Note on Sources A Note on Sources
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter provides an overview of how the F-15 Eagle and F-16 Fighting Falcon, launched by the United States Air Force, had changed aerial warfare. It briefly discusses how the fighter pilot culture developed during World War I when romantic and heroic idealization of the fighter pilot meant a great deal to the American public and the pilots themselves. The chapter also describes the five core elements of the mythic construction of an idealized fighter: aggressiveness, independence, heroic imagery, technology, and community. Concepts of masculinity are intertwined in all five elements. Moreover, the chapter looks at the F-15 Eagle and F-16 Fighting Falcon, originally designed to focus on air-to-air combat, as the strongest examples of the influence of culture on technology within the United States Air Force. It emphasizes the link between culture and technology in military hardware, highlighting that all technologies are the results of humans making specific choices in a particular historical moment and context.
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