Full metadata
Title
Ghostly politics: statecraft, monumentalization, and a logic of haunting
Description
International Relations has traditionally focused on conflict and war, but the effects of violence including dead bodies and memorialization practices have largely been considered beyond the purview of the field. This project seeks to explore the relationship between practices of statecraft at multiple levels and decisions surrounding memorialization. Exploring the role of bodies and bones and the politics of display at memorial sites, as well as the construction of space, I explore how practices of statecraft often rely on an exclusionary logic which renders certain lives politically qualified and others beyond the realm of qualified politics. I draw on the Derridean notion of hauntology to explore how the line between life and death itself is a political construction which sustains particular performances of statecraft. Utilizing ethnographic field work and discourse analysis, I trace the relationship between a logic of haunting and statecraft at sites of memory in three cases. Rwandan genocide memorialization is often centered on bodies and bones, displayed as evidence of the genocide. Yet, this display invokes the specter of genocide in order to legitimate specific policymaking. Memorialization of undocumented immigrants who die crossing the US-Mexico border offers an opportunity to explore practices that grieve ungrievable lives, and how memorialization can posit a resistance to the bordering mechanisms of statecraft. 9/11 memorialization offers an interesting case because of the way in which bodies were vanished and spaces reconfigured. Using the question of vanishing as a frame, this final case explores how statecraft is dependent on vanishing: the making absent of something so as to render something else present. Several main conclusions and implications are drawn from the cases. First, labeling certain lives as politically unqualified can sustain certain conceptualizations of the state. Second, paying attention to the way statecraft is a haunted performance, being haunted by the things we perhaps ethically should be haunted by, can re-conceptualize the way International Relations thinks about concepts such as security, citizenship, and power. Finally, memorialization, while seemingly innocuous, is really a space for political contestation that can, if done in certain ways, really implicate the high politics of security conventional wisdom.
Date Created
2012
Contributors
- Auchter, Jessica (Author)
- Doty, Roxanne L (Thesis advisor)
- Ashley, Richard K. (Committee member)
- Talebi, Shahla (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
- International relations
- Political Science
- Body
- Haunting
- Memory
- Security
- statecraft
- September 11 Terrorist Attacks, 2001
- International relations--Psychological aspects.
- Memorialization--Political aspects.
- Memorialization
- Atrocities--Political aspects.
- Atrocities
- Collective memory--Political aspects.
- collective memory
Geographic Subject
Resource Type
Extent
vii, 293 p
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.14584
Statement of Responsibility
by Jessica Auchter
Description Source
Viewed on Dec. 12, 2014
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: Ph. D., Arizona State University, 2012
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. 278-293)
Field of study: Political science
System Created
- 2012-08-24 06:16:35
System Modified
- 2021-08-30 01:48:30
- 3 years 2 months ago
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