Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:409Hits:38453728Skip Navigation Links
Show My Basket
Contact Us
IDSA Web Site
Ask Us
Today's News
HelpExpand Help
Advanced search

In Basket
  Journal Article   Journal Article
 

ID198615
Title ProperNew materialism, whiteness and the politics of vitality
Other Title InformationRethinking activity/passivity in critical security studies
LanguageENG
AuthorBrito, Tarsis
Summary / Abstract (Note)New materialist thought has become particularly influential in critical security studies over the past decade. Advocating for an understanding of security that comprises and does justice to the vibrant, unpredictable and active role of materiality, scholars have significantly contributed to an array of debates within critical security studies. Engaging with post/decolonial, critical race studies and feminist literatures, this article offers a critique of new materialism that focuses on its embracement of ideas of vitality, activity and movement as a way to overcome modernity’s pervasive subject/object dualisms. My argument is that this stance risks reifying an activity/passivity hierarchy that has been centrally interwoven with colonial, racial and gendered dynamics of subjugation. The idea is that new materialism’s incisive critique has often failed to interrogate colonial modernity’s abjection of passivity itself, a process that has been paramount in the historical production and securing of whiteness. This article’s goal, however, is not only to push the analytical and political boundaries of new materialism. By rethinking the racial-colonial underpinnings of this activity/passivity hierarchy, the article also offers promising research avenues for critical security studies which help us understand and interrogate racial-colonial security structures and practices of policing, violence and exploitation.
`In' analytical NoteSecurity Dialogue Vol. 56, No.2; Apr 2025: p.133 - 151
Journal SourceSecurity Dialogue 2025-04 56, 2
Key WordsSecurity ;  Race ;  Whiteness ;  New Materialism ;  Coloniality ;  Activity/passivity