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Given the increasing centrality of identity to contemporary
politics, James Skellys book provides a critical and useful
analysis of the dominant and problematic conceptual bases for self
and identity. Inspired in part by his lawsuit against the US
Secretary of Defense while serving as an active duty military
officer, Skelly argues that our use of language in the construction
of identities is unwitting, unreflective, and has engendered
horrific consequences for tens of millions of humans. In contrast,
he demonstrates our need to overcome sectarian modes of thinking
and to engage in much deeper forms of solidarity with others by
foregrounding a species identity. This book offers not only an
academic reflection on the concept of identity but one that delves
into the nature of the self and identity by drawing on Skelly's
concrete experience of attempting to present a self-identity
opposed to war in the face of the political, psychological,
religious, and legal arguments put forth in a year-long legal
battle with the United States government. One consequence is that
Skelly argues that to create a new and more pacific human
sensibility we must help ourselves and others to gain sovereignty
over our social worlds and the definition of 'who we are', by
arming individuals with the tools necessary to overcome the
definitions and categorisations we are subjected to in the
construction of traditional notions of 'identity'.
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