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Figuring Violence

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Figuring Violence explores the roles of imagination and affects like apprehension, affection, admiration, gratitude, pity, and anger in sustaining contemporary American militarism. The book charts...
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  • 20 November 2018
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In the United States, the early years of the war on terror were marked by the primacy of affects like fear and insecurity. These aligned neatly with the state’s drive toward intensive securitization and an aggressive foreign policy. But for the broader citizenry, such affects were tolerable at best and unbearable at worst; they were not sustainable. Figuring Violence catalogs the affects that define the latter stages of this war and the imaginative work that underpins them. These affects—apprehension, affection, admiration, gratitude, pity, and righteous anger—are far more subtle and durable than their predecessors, rendering them deeply compatible with the ambitions of a state embroiling itself in a perpetual and unwinnable war.

Surveying the cultural landscape of this sprawling conflict, Figuring Violence reveals the varied mechanisms by which these affects have been militarized. Rebecca Adelman tracks their convergences around six types of beings: civilian children, military children, military spouses, veterans with PTSD and TBI, Guantánamo detainees, and military dogs. All of these groups have become preferred objects of sentiment in wartime public culture, but they also have in common their status as political subjects who are partially or fully unknowable. They become visible to outsiders through a range of mediated and imaginative practices that are ostensibly motivated by concern or compassion. However, these practices actually function to reduce these beings to abstracted figures, silencing their political subjectivities and obscuring their suffering. As a result, they are erased and rendered hypervisible at once. Figuring Violence demonstrates that this dynamic ultimately propagates the very militarism that begets their victimization.

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Price: $33.00
Pages: 352
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Imprint: Fordham University Press
Publication Date: 20 November 2018
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780823281688
Format: Paperback
BISACs:

SOCIAL SCIENCE / Media Studies, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Public Policy / Military Policy, LITERARY CRITICISM / Semiotics & Theory

This timely, sprightly, and elegantly written monograph explores how the imagination and affect converge and circulate to generate a militarized affective economy. Though her strategic use of affect theory, Adelman provides insights into emotional and interpersonal phenomena that political theorists tend to ignore. In so doing, Adelman produces a theoretical account of how affects have shaped and sustained the U.S. public’s responses to persons in the military and she reflects on the ethical and political intricacies of these responses. Adelman attends in particular to the imaginings of citizens, the nation, and the state so as to develop a more precise account of the affective and imaginative mechanisms by which militarization results from this interaction.---Don Pease, Dartmouth College
Rebecca A. Adelman is Associate Professor of Media and Communication Studies at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County. She is the author of Beyond the Checkpoint: Visual Practices in America’s Global War on Terror.

On the Cover Image: “Vertigo at Guantanamo” ix

Introduction: Fabricated Connections, Deeply Felt 1

1. Envisioning Civilian Childhood 27

2. Affective Pedagogies for Military Children 52

3. Recognizing Military Wives 88

4. Economies of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder and Traumatic Brain Injury 137

5. Liberal Imaginaries of Guantánamo 178

6. Feeling for Dogs in the War on Terror 212

Conclusion: A Radical and Unsentimental Attention 245

Acknowledgments 251

Notes 257

Index 329