Boredom, (In)action, War and Warriors
27 & 28 August 2020, Amsterdam
Confirmed Keynote speaker: Professor Mark Kingwell, University of Torrento
Boredom has often been defined as idleness, slowness, doing nothing,
doing something over and over again, and waiting (Smith 1981, Daren 1999,
Mæland & Brunstad 2009, Bergstein 2009, Prozak 2017). These definitions
suggest that boredom is an experience that does not generate meanings and ideas
by itself about itself. Boredom remains constantly relevant to sociocultural
and political spheres only through its opposite. It is portrayed as the empty
bubble, or the vacuum of functionality that gains relevance only through what
it is not. Nietzsche (1974, 108) explains, “Boredom is that disagreeable
‘windless calm’ of the soul that precedes a happy voyage and cheerful winds.”
He highlights boredom only through what it comes after it. However, we would
like to suggest boredom encourages and stimulates thoughts, meanings, and
ideas, snapping almost ‘magically’ out of itself. In another words, boredom is
the way in and out of boredom.
These approaches to boredom overlook the
affective quality of boredom and its political capacities, because they only
locate boredom through lack, absence and nothingness. This lack, absence and
nothingness largely refers to inaction and disappearance of action. We identify
this implicit dichotomy of ‘action versus inaction, and addressing inaction as
the absence of action as a major theoretical and analytical glitch in
understanding boredom. The action/inaction dichotomy overlooks how boredom
becomes political and affective through the bodies and collectives that choose
to do nothing, remain inactive and slip into the split between agency and
subjectivity (Protevi 2011).
By acknowledging the action/inaction dichotomy and problematizing its
link with boredom, we would like to ask how militarized bodies and weaponized
subjectivities actually experience inaction and boredom? How do military
personnel or nonstate-armed actors experience, explain and utter inaction? What
is the other side of inaction and boredom for them? Does inaction and boredom
influence their worldviews, their combat performances, and the perceptions of
violence? Finally, how do boredom and inaction produce a vision of future and
post-deployment?
We invite papers that address:
- Boredom, inaction and violence
- Boredom, inaction and creative aggression
- Boredom, inaction and transgressive play
- Boredom and inaction as political affect
- Boredom and inaction in policing
- Boredom and inaction in peace and peacekeeping
- Boredom and inaction in combat/battlefield
- Post-deployment boredom and inactivity
- Moralities of inaction and combat
- Temporalities of boredom and inaction
- Bored bodies in/actions
- Religious experience of boredom and inaction
We are especially interested in papers that are empirically oriented and
based in ethnographic study of military, policing, militancy, and militarized
bodies. We look forward to those from anthropology, sociology, human geography,
cultural studies, history, political science, media scholars, communication
studies and related disciplines.
The two-days workshop will open up an interdisciplinary platform to
think about boredom and inaction while meeting other like-minded academics. We
expect the invited participants to submit their papers (max 5000 words) in
advance and the papers will be distributed to others and the discussants in
order to foster further debates.
The organizers intend to publish the accepted papers either as special
issue or an edited volume. The accepted papers will be treated as drafts, which
participants should revise after feedbacks from others. The revised papers will
be peer reviewed. The editors will decide to accept or reject them. Those
interested to present and participate should send us an abstract of maximum 400 words along with 100 words bio
note to Dr. Eva van Roekel (eva.van.roekel@vu.nl) and before March 30, 2020.
Organizers:
Dr. Younes Saramifar, Social & Cultural Anthropology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam and Humboldt University of Berlin
Dr. Eva van Roekel, Social & Cultural Anthropology, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam
Contact Info:
Dr. Eva van Roekel eva.van.roekel@vu.nl; Dr. Younes Saramifar
y.saramifar@vu.nl
Contact Email:
eva.van.roekel@vu.nl
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