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hal.structure.identifierCentre Émile Durkheim [CED]
dc.contributor.authorDELORI, Mathias
dc.date.issued2014
dc.identifier.issn2326-9995
dc.description.abstractEnAs pointed out by military historian Joanna Bourke, ‘the characteristic act of men at war is not dying, it is killing’. This simple observation has led to some important literature on how soldiers relate to the suffering and deaths they cause. This literature has shown that military consent for killing does not have its origins in a pre-discursive biological nature. Rather, it is mediated by powerful meaning structures – such as nationalist narratives or demonized representations of the enemy – that state which lives should be recognized as livable, and which lives should remain excluded from this economy of compassion. This article investigates how military consent for killing is constructed in the context of contemporary Western wars. It does so by focusing on a particular case study: those French soldiers who participated in the war in Libya in 2011. The analysis – based on 40 semi-structured interviews with military leaders and fighter aircraft pilots – reveals a framing of war where enemies are neither framed as an object of hatred nor of ritual sacrifice nor as anything else. They are ‘ungrievable lives’ as expressed by Judith Butler: ‘they are, ontologically, and from the start, already lost and destroyed, which means that when they are destroyed in war, nothing is destroyed’. The article reviews the ideas and materialities that lead to this spectacular case of misrecognition.
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherBristol University Press
dc.subject.encritical war studies
dc.subject.enconsent for killing
dc.subject.endiscursive approach
dc.subject.enbiopolitique
dc.title.enKilling without hatred: the politics of (non)-recognition in contemporary Western wars
dc.typeArticle de revue
dc.identifier.doi10.1080/23269995.2014.935102
dc.subject.halSciences de l'Homme et Société/Science politique
bordeaux.journalGlobal Discourse: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Current Affairs and Applied Contemporary Thought
bordeaux.page516-531
bordeaux.volume4
bordeaux.issue4
bordeaux.peerReviewedoui
hal.identifierhalshs-01116179
hal.version1
hal.popularnon
hal.audienceInternationale
hal.origin.linkhttps://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr//halshs-01116179v1
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