Temporalities of Emergent Axiomatic Violence in Brexit Scotland

IF 0.9 3区 社会学 Q3 ANTHROPOLOGY
Gabriela Manley
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

ABSTRACT Following an acrimonious referendum on European Union membership, the UK was plunged into chaos as people attempted to negotiate a deeply divided domestic political landscape. In Scotland, things were further complicated by the independence question and the Scottish National Party’s (SNP) call for a second independence referendum. In light of the Brexit result, since 2016 many citizens of Scotland have re-thought their position on independence owing to emergent axiomatic violence located in the UK’s split from Europe. This article examines the different temporalities involved with the emergent axiomatic violence of Brexit as experienced in Scotland. For those who once supported the Union, Brexit is understood as a moment of violent and unforeseen rupture, emerging from a one-off event in the present. In contrast, nationalists speak of Brexit as representative of the accretive slow violence brought on through historical imbalances in UK politics; Brexit was to be expected, emerging from long-term processes. For EU migrants, the violence of Brexit is built into their futures, as they contemplate work and family life in a drastically changed socio-political landscape. Although the ‘emergent’ aspect of the violence inherent in Brexit is dependent on perspective, all agree that the violence is axiomatic, part of everyday life in Brexit Britain.
脱欧苏格兰出现公理化暴力的时间性
在一场激烈的欧盟成员国公投之后,英国陷入了混乱,人们试图就一个严重分裂的国内政治格局进行谈判。在苏格兰,独立问题和苏格兰民族党(SNP)要求举行第二次独立公投使情况进一步复杂化。鉴于英国脱欧的结果,自2016年以来,由于英国脱欧引发的不言自明的暴力事件,许多苏格兰公民重新思考了他们对独立的立场。本文考察了苏格兰经历的脱欧公理化暴力所涉及的不同时间性。对于那些曾经支持欧盟的人来说,英国脱欧被理解为一个暴力的、不可预见的破裂时刻,源于当前的一次性事件。相比之下,民族主义者认为,英国退欧代表着英国政治的历史失衡所带来的渐进渐进的暴力;英国脱欧是意料之中的事,是在长期过程中出现的。对于欧盟移民来说,英国脱欧的暴力已经融入了他们的未来,因为他们在一个急剧变化的社会政治环境中考虑工作和家庭生活。尽管英国脱欧中固有的暴力的“突现”方面取决于视角,但所有人都认为暴力是不言自明的,是脱欧后英国日常生活的一部分。
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来源期刊
Anthropological Forum
Anthropological Forum ANTHROPOLOGY-
CiteScore
3.60
自引率
10.00%
发文量
14
期刊介绍: Anthropological Forum is a journal of social anthropology and comparative sociology that was founded in 1963 and has a distinguished publication history. The journal provides a forum for both established and innovative approaches to anthropological research. A special section devoted to contributions on applied anthropology appears periodically. The editors are especially keen to publish new approaches based on ethnographic and theoretical work in the journal"s established areas of strength: Australian culture and society, Aboriginal Australia, Southeast Asia and the Pacific.
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