Catálogo de publicaciones - revistas
Cooperation and Conflict
Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial en inglés
Published for over 40 years, Cooperation and Conflict is a peer reviewed journal that aims to promote research on and understanding of international relations. It believes in the deeds of academic pluralism and thus does not represent any specific methodology, approach, tradition or school. The mission of the journal is to meet the demands of the scholarly community having an interest in international studies.Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial
No disponibles.
Disponibilidad
Institución detectada | Período | Navegá | Descargá | Solicitá |
---|---|---|---|---|
No detectada | desde mar. 1999 / hasta dic. 2023 | SAGE Journals |
Información
Tipo de recurso:
revistas
ISSN impreso
0010-8367
ISSN electrónico
1460-3691
Editor responsable
SAGE Publishing (SAGE)
País de edición
Estados Unidos
Fecha de publicación
1965-
Cobertura temática
Tabla de contenidos
Feeling Everyday IR: Embodied, affective, militarising movement as choreography of war
Linda Åhäll
<jats:p> This article explores affective, embodied encounters between military and civilian bodies in the everyday as choreography of war. It argues that by paying attention to the intersecting political sphere of bodies, affect and movement – through the metaphor of ‘dance’ – we are not only able to understand how security operates as a logic reproducing the militarisation of the everyday, but also able to identify a representational gap, an aesthetic politics, potentially useful for resistance to such practices normalising war in the everyday. It draws on two British examples of where military moves disrupt civilian spaces in the everyday: an arts project commemorating the Battle of the Somme, and a football game taking place during Remembrance week. Through embodied choreographies of war in the everyday, dance is used as a metaphor to understand militarisation as an example of feeling Everyday IR. Thus, dance is useful to ‘see’ the politics of Everyday IR, but also to understand, to feel and possibly to resist the politics of normalisation of war in the everyday. This is one example of how feeling Everyday IR offers alternative openings into political puzzles of security logics informing war as practice. </jats:p>
Palabras clave: Political Science and International Relations.
Pp. 149-166