Bodies, Subjects, and Violence in International Relations

Chapter 1 provides a reading of how the subject of International Relations has been theorized in relation to human bodies and violence. The chapter argues that bodies have been problematically understood in liberal humanist terms as individual, material objects, preexisting politics, that house sove...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inBodies of Violence
Main Author Wilcox, Lauren B
Format Book Chapter
LanguageEnglish
Published New York Oxford University Press 02.01.2015
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text
ISBN0199384487
9780199384488
DOI10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199384488.003.0002

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Summary:Chapter 1 provides a reading of how the subject of International Relations has been theorized in relation to human bodies and violence. The chapter argues that bodies have been problematically understood in liberal humanist terms as individual, material objects, preexisting politics, that house sovereign subjects. Furthermore, contemporary practices of violence are constituted not only in reference to sovereign power, as most IR theory assumes, but biopower as well. Biopolitical practices of violence call our attention to the question of how bodies are constituted as objects and what the parameters and possibilities for embodied subjectivity are. Compared to International Relations, feminist theory has been much more attentive to questions of embodied subjectivity related to power and violence. Engaging with feminist theorists, the chapter provides a conceptualization of a body politics that understands bodies as produced by, and productive of, social and political relations.
ISBN:0199384487
9780199384488
DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199384488.003.0002