Coda: the experience of war beyond exceptionalism
Journal article, Peer reviewed

Permanent lenke
https://hdl.handle.net/11250/3159683Utgivelsesdato
2025-02-01Metadata
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- Publications [1561]
Originalversjon
in War and Society pp. 172-277 10.1080/07292473.2024.240953410.1080/07292473.2024.2409534
10.1080/07292473.2024.2409534
Sammendrag
When linked to the context of war, fun can be understood as an expression of both direct and indirect communication, a manner of public engagement as well as a ‘ritual of inversion’ in which the proprieties of structure (the declared mandate and rules of war) are lampooned and violated, yet the finalities of the project of war (dominion, control, violence, and so on) remain intact. The focus on fun is not meant to trivialise the suffering war produces. On the contrary, it encourages a more honest and accurate analysis of what actively experiencing war entails. There are different reasons for pursuing a line of research that delves into the articulation of different emotions, moralities, and fighters’ perspectives, for instance the need to de-exceptionalise war’s brutality.
Serie
War and SocietyWar and Society
War and Society vol. 44 no. 1