The Discursive Construction of War and Peace in the Books of Three Turkish Commanders on the “1974 Cyprus Peace Operation”
Öz
The article analyses the construction of war and peace in three books, so-called ego-documents, written by soldiers who themselves fought in the Cypriot 1974 war. In order to better understand these constructions, we first develop a theoretical model on war and peace discourses, supported by Laclau and Mouffe’s discourse theory, which has been cross-fertilized with the empirical analysis. War discourses are seen to have five nodal points: 1/An Enemy-Self dichotomy; 2/The Army as war assemblage; 3/Destruction and death (of the Enemy); 4/Legitimations and aims of war; 5/A spatially and temporally restricted arena of intensified reality. Peace discourses have two variations: The photo-negativistic articulation of peace (with these nodal points: 1/The absence of the Enemy, 2/The non-combatant or non-existent Army; 3/The absence of death and destruction, with the emphasis on life, 4/The absence of legitimations (and aims) of war; 5/Continuity of space and time, as everyday life) and the more autonomous articulation of peace (with two nodal points: 1/Social harmony, economic equity and social justice; 2/Desire for, and the desirability of, peace). Our discourse-theoretical analysis demonstrates how these three books mostly articulate war discourses, but the books are also seen to contain two important characteristics from a democratic-humanist perspective: They still contain articulations of the peace discourses, and they demonstrate the dislocations of the war discourses.
Anahtar Kelimeler
Destekleyen Kurum
Teşekkür
Kaynakça
- ARISTOTLE. Nicomachean Ethics, Book 10, trans. W. D. Ross. https://classicalwisdom.com/greek_books/nicomachean-ethics-book-x/7/
- BENJAMIN, WALTER (1979). “Theories of German Fascism: On the Collection of Essays War and Warrior, Edited by Ernst Jünger,” trans., J. Wikoff, New German Critique, 17 (Spring): 120-128.
- BILETZKI, ANAT (2007). “The Language-Games of Peace,” in CHARLES WEBEL and JOHAN GALTUNG (eds.) Handbook of Peace and Conflict Studies. London and New York: Routledge, pp. 345-354.
- BONN, KEITH E., BAKER, ANTHONY E. (2000). Guide to military operations other than war: tactics, techniques, and procedures for stability and support operations: domestic and international. Mechanicsburg: Stackpole.
- CARPENTIER, NICO (2011). “The Ideological Model of War. Discursive Mediations of the Self and the Enemy,” in NANCY BILLIAS & LEONHARD PRAEG (eds.), Creating Destruction: Constructing Images of Violence and Genocide. Amsterdam: Rodopi, pp. 13-38.
- CARPENTIER, NICO (2015). “Introduction: Strengthening Cultural War Studies,” in NICO CARPENTIER (ed.), Culture, Trauma, and Conflict: Cultural Studies Perspectives on War, 2nd ed. Newcastle: Cambridge Scholars, pp. 1–20.
- CARPENTIER, NICO (2017). The Discursive-Material Knot: Cyprus in conflict and community media participation. New York: Peter Lang.
- DEMMERS, JOLLE (2012). Theories of Violent Conflict: An Introduction. London: Routledge.
Ayrıntılar
Birincil Dil
İngilizce
Konular
-
Bölüm
Araştırma Makalesi
Yazarlar
D. Beybin Kejanlıoğlu
*
Bu kişi benim
0000-0002-0534-6399
Türkiye
Nico Carpentıer
0000-0002-8996-4636
Czech Republic
Yayımlanma Tarihi
20 Mart 2020
Gönderilme Tarihi
6 Haziran 2019
Kabul Tarihi
20 Aralık 2019
Yayımlandığı Sayı
Yıl 2019 Cilt: 20 Sayı: 44