冲突终止的集合:流行文化,全球政治和战争的结束

IF 1.5 3区 社会学 Q2 INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
Cahir O’Doherty
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引用次数: 0

摘要

战争如何结束的问题一直很重要,特别是在正在进行的反恐战争的背景下。这个问题传统上是在国际关系中通过理性选择理论、逻辑建模和博弈论来解决的。这种方法越来越不适合捕捉当代战争的复杂性和模糊性,尤其是反恐战争。这些战场上的模棱两可往往与政治和公众在战争中看到决定性胜利的愿望不一致。本文建立在战争终止研究中最近的重要工作的基础上,以便将战争结束重新概念化为集合。通过更多地关注围绕战争的政治修辞所灌输的影响,并利用影响和涌现的概念,本文提出了一种研究当代战争结束的新方法。流行文化日益被视为全球政治的一个重要场所,本文分析的案例研究提出了这样一种观点,即牺牲出现在电影和总统的言论中,这是一种修辞,使领导人能够在战场优柔寡断的情况下宣布战争胜利。通过情感的电影相遇,在这里通过战争结束的集合概念化,观众可以变得更接受这种政治主张。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Assemblages of conflict termination: popular culture, global politics and the end of wars
The question of how wars end is of continued importance, especially in the context of the ongoing War on Terror. This question has traditionally been approached within International Relations through rational choice theories, logical modelling and game theory. Such approaches have become increasingly ill-suited to capturing the complexity and ambiguity of contemporary warfare and the War on Terror in particular. These battlefield ambiguities are often at odds with political and public desires to see decisive victory in wars. This article builds on recent critical work within War Termination Studies in order to re-conceptualise the end of war as assemblages. By paying greater attention to the affects inculcated by political rhetoric surrounding war and utilising the concepts of affect and emergence, this article presents a novel approach to the study of contemporary war termination. Utilising popular culture, increasingly seen as a crucial site of global politics, the case study analysed here advances the argument that sacrifice emerges from cinema and presidential rhetoric as a trope that allows leaders to claim victory in war despite indecisive conditions of the ground. Through affective cinematic encounters, conceptualised here through the end of wars assemblages, audiences can become more accepting of such political claims.
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来源期刊
International Relations
International Relations INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS-
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
6.20%
发文量
35
期刊介绍: International Relations is explicitly pluralist in outlook. Editorial policy favours variety in both subject-matter and method, at a time when so many academic journals are increasingly specialised in scope, and sectarian in approach. We welcome articles or proposals from all perspectives and on all subjects pertaining to international relations: law, economics, ethics, strategy, philosophy, culture, environment, and so on, in addition to more mainstream conceptual work and policy analysis. We believe that such pluralism is in great demand by the academic and policy communities and the interested public.
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