Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:932Hits:19865796Skip 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
 

ID116578
Title ProperOccupier/occupied
LanguageENG
AuthorVisweswaran, Kamala
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)As military occupation increasingly informs the politics of both democracies and dictatorships, capitalist and socialist regimes, this essay asks why it is foundational for sovereignty and the post-war state-form. In particular, it questions the complicity of post-colonial theory with security discourses in reading movements for self-determination as threats to the state or as forms of terrorism rather than as alternate possibilities for freedom and liberty. It suggests not only that the ongoing twenty-first century relations between occupier and occupied reprise the racialised forms of identity that characterised relations between coloniser and colonised in the preceding two centuries, but also that relations between occupied peoples may produce affiliative poetics and shared terms of political reference or solidarity.
`In' analytical NoteIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 19, No.4; Jul 2012: p.440-451
Journal SourceIdentities: Global Studies in Culture and Power Vol. 19, No.4; Jul 2012: p.440-451
Key WordsMilitary Occupation ;  Tourism ;  Post - Colonial Theory ;  Civil Society ;  Security Discourse ;  Poetics