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"Who's Afraid of ISIS?" eschews familiar debates about the status
of ISIS as an existential threat to the West, with the aim of
submitting those types of arguments to a reasoned examination of
the political place of anxiety itself. This collection concerns
itself with the doxologies that attend such arguments, or with that
which, as Bourdieu wrote, "goes without saying becomes it comes
without saying" and so become the unexamined points of departure
for contentions about ISIS that may, for that very reason, hold
entire life worlds together. This book was originally published as
a special issue of Critical Studies on Security.
Examines how the humanitarian order advances a message of moral
triumph and care while abandoning the dispossessed Prompted by a
growing number of refugees and other displaced people,
intersections of design and humanitarianism are proliferating. From
the IKEA Foundation's Better Shelter to Airbnb's Open Homes
program, the consumer economy has engaged the global refugee crisis
with seemingly new tactics that normalize an institutionally
sanctioned politics of evasion. Exploring "the global shelter
imaginary," this book charts the ways shelter functions as a form
of rightless relief that expels recognition of the rights of the
displaced and advances political paradoxes of displacement itself.
"The leading academic vehicle for scholarly publication in the
field of medieval warfare." Medieval Warfare The essays in this
volume of the Journal continue its proud tradition of presenting
cutting-edge research with a wide chronological and geographical
range, from eleventh-century Georgia (David IV's use of the methods
described in De velitatione bellica) to fifteenth-century England
and France (a detailed analysis of the use of the under-appreciated
lancegay and similar weapons). Iberia and the Empire are also
addressed, with a study of Aragonese leaders in the War of the Two
Pedros, a discussion of Prince Ferdinand's battle-seeking strategy
prior to the battle of Toro in 1476, and an analysis and
transcription of a newly-discovered Habsburg battle plan of the
early sixteenth century, drawn up for the war against Venice. The
volume also embraces different approaches, from
cultural-intellectual history (the afterlife of the medieval
Christian Warrior), to experimental archaeology (the mechanics of
raising trebuchets), to comparison of "the face of battle" in a
medieval illuminated manuscript with its depiction in modern films,
to archivally-based administrative history (recruitment among the
sub-gentry for Edward I's armies). Contributors: David S. Bachrach,
Daniel Bertrand, Peter Burkholder, Ekaitz Etxeberria Gallastegi,
Michael John Harbinson, Steven Isaac, Donald J. Kagay, Tomaz Lazar,
Mamuka Tsurtsumia
It is all worse than we think. It is even worse than Mike Davis,
for whom "every day is judgment day" (The Nation), could have
imagined. The contributions to this volume are explorations of what
Davis-in typical wry fashion-once referred to as the field of
"disaster studies." Collectively, they show how our "disaster
imaginary" has been rendered inadequate by the existing order's
ability to feed off and coopt our resistance to it. Contemporary
mass protests are now subsumed as instances of an established,
profitable politics of rage. Geopolitical conflict poses not as a
threat to hegemonic power but rather serves the interests of a
global market which capitalizes on lucrative, permanent war.
Climate change itself, if it was ever thought to be a
universalizing phenomenon, is now treated as an extensive market
opportunity by global risk insurance conglomerates and predatory
lenders who bet against any rescue of the planet. Such catastrophic
developments resist the language we use to describe and deconstruct
them. The contributions to this volume seek to reimagine our
understanding of disaster, and, following the example of Davis
himself, to refuse outdated models of political transcendence as
vigorously as they reject narratives of resignation.
In "An Aesthetic Occupation" Daniel Bertrand Monk unearths the
history of the unquestioned political immediacy of "sacred"
architecture in the conflict between Palestinians and Israelis.
Monk combines groundbreaking archival research with theoretical
insights to examine in particular the Mandate era--the period in
the first half of the twentieth century when Britain held
sovereignty over Palestine. While examining the relation between
monuments and mass violence in this context, he documents
Palestinian, Zionist, and British attempts to advance competing
arguments concerning architecture's utility to politics.
Succumbing neither to the view that monuments are autonomous
figures onto which political meaning has been projected, nor to the
obverse claim that in Jerusalem shrines are immediate
manifestations of the political, Monk traces the reciprocal history
of "both" these positions as well as describes how opponents in the
conflict debated and theorized their own participation in its
self-representation. Analyzing controversies over the authenticity
of holy sites, the restorations of the Dome of the Rock, and the
discourse of accusation following the Buraq, or Wailing Wall, riots
of 1929, Monk discloses for the first time that, as combatants
looked to architecture and invoked the transparency of their own
historical situation, they simultaneously advanced--and
normalized--the conflict's inability to account for itself.
This balanced and unique study will appeal to anyone interested in
Israel or Zionism, the Palestinians, the Middle East conflict,
Jerusalem, or its monuments. Scholars of architecture, political
theory, and religion, as well as cultural and critical studies will
also be informed by its arguments.
"Who's Afraid of ISIS?" eschews familiar debates about the status
of ISIS as an existential threat to the West, with the aim of
submitting those types of arguments to a reasoned examination of
the political place of anxiety itself. This collection concerns
itself with the doxologies that attend such arguments, or with that
which, as Bourdieu wrote, "goes without saying becomes it comes
without saying" and so become the unexamined points of departure
for contentions about ISIS that may, for that very reason, hold
entire life worlds together. This book was originally published as
a special issue of Critical Studies on Security.
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