This book highlights the diverse and complicated ways that violence becomes axiomatic, namely through political rhetoric, epistemological impositions, and colonial legacies. Considering how axiomatic violence emerges from events of rupture as well as slow-moving structural inequalities, authors interrogate both the novelty and mundane quality of the current political moment. Approaching violence as axiomatic expands the conceptual lexicon for discussing how rhetorics, metaphors, and prescriptive assumptions can be inherently violent and become normalised, losing their event-like status. Through the routinisation of the extraordinary, truths become indisputable. Axioms combine neoteric and foundational violence to lend legitimacy to apparently incontestable categories of domination, disenfranchisement, and epistemological governance.
This book will be an asset to students and researchers of political theory, philosophy, and social anthropology and those interested in learning about the intersections of post-colonial and post-liberal anthropology, violence, and power.
The chapters in this book were first published as a special issue of Anthropological Forum and are accompanied by a new Afterword.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Introduction - Emergent Axioms of Violence: Toward an Anthropology of Post-Liberal Modernity 1. Refusals of Tolerance: Hunger, Mercy, and the Ethics of Immediacy in Bosnia and Herzegovina 2. Anxiety, Ambivalence, and the Violence of Expectations: Migrant Reception and Resettlement in Sicily 3. Temporalities of Emergent Axiomatic Violence in Brexit Scotland 4. 'Rebirthing' the Violent Past: Friction Between Post-Conflict Axioms of Remembrance and Cambodian Buddhist Forgetting 5. To Cut Down the Dreaming: Epistemic Violence, Ambivalence and the Logic of Coloniality 6. Afterword: Axioms of Violence 7. Afterword: Limits, Events, and Anthropology's Complicity in Axiomatic Violence