Item Details
Skip Navigation Links
   ActiveUsers:377Hits:19886978Skip 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
 

ID183703
Title ProperConfronting the gated community: Towards a decolonial critique of violence beyond the paradigm of war
LanguageENG
AuthorFurtado, Henrique Tavares
Summary / Abstract (Note)This article investigates the works of Dussel, Maldonado-Torres, and Mbembe as representatives of a tendency in the field of decolonial thought to assume the templates of warfare and the camp as the archetypal registers of violence in the contemporary world. Identifying this focus as the remnant of a Eurocentric vocabulary (the paradigm of war), the article proposes a shift from the language of warfare predominant in the field to a language of welfare. The article turns to the gated community (GC), instead of the camp, and the imperatives of (re)creation, instead of the logics of elimination, as new templates with which to make sense of modern/colonial violence. Moving beyond militaristic imagery, the analysis shows a form of violence that emerges as a response to the endless search for a life of convenience inside the walls of the GC. To this end, the article advances the concept of the dialect of disarrangement, the enforced but uneasy encounter between two subjectivities that inhabit the GC: the patrons (the homeowners who consume the easy life) and servants (the racialised service staff). In the GC, violence emerges in attempts to respond to this (in)convenient encounter via misrepresentations of both patrons and servants as out of their place.
`In' analytical NoteReview of International Studies Vol. 48, No.1; Jan 2022: p. 91 - 110
Journal SourceReview of International Studies Vol: 48 No 1
Key WordsViolence ;  Race ;  Decolonisation ;  Gated Communities ;  Critical International Relations Theory ;  Necropolitics


 
 
Media / Other Links  Full Text