ID | 113849 |
Title Proper | War experiences/war practices/war theory |
Language | ENG |
Author | Sylvester, Christine |
Publication | 2012. |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article challenges International Relations to turn its view of war around and start not with states, militaries, strategies, conventional security issues or weapons, and not with the common main aim of establishing causes of war. The challenge is to conceptualise war as a subset of social relations of experience, on the grounds that war cannot be fully apprehended unless it is studied up from people who experience it in myriad ways and not only down from abstract places of International Relations theory. To study war as experience requires that the body come into focus as a unit that has war agency and is also a prime target of war violence. It also requires exploration of the concept of experience. Using an exemplary texts approach, the article briefly reminds us where the field is in its war concerns, before noting work on contemporary wars conducted under the flag of feminist International Relations, where experience and bodies have always been front and centre, and where a social war studies emphasis is developing. The discussion then raises definitional complexities that must be addressed and suggests areas where various International Relations traditions could collaborate with feminist International Relations and fields like anthropology to study the social relations of war. |
`In' analytical Note | Millennium: Journal of International Studies Vol. 40, No.3; Jun 2012: p.483-503 |
Journal Source | Millennium: Journal of International Studies Vol. 40, No.3; Jun 2012: p.483-503 |
Key Words | Body ; Experience ; War |