Lecture image placeholder

Premium content

Access to this content requires a subscription. You must be a premium user to view this content.

Monthly subscription - $9.99Pay per view - $4.99Access through your institutionLogin with Underline account
Need help?
Contact us
Lecture placeholder background
VIDEO DOI: https://doi.org/10.48448/vybk-d935

technical paper

AAA Annual Meeting 2021

November 18, 2021

Baltimore, United States

Sound of the shotgun: navigating legal culpability in normalized perceptions of violence and insecurity

keywords:

power/identity

material culture/materiality

violence

Throughout the past decades, anthropologists have focused attention on violence across diverse localities. This has included ethnographies on armed conflict and post-conflict settings, the everyday forms of violence that define many urban centers, and more structural forms of violence that paralyze people’s capabilities to lead optimal lives. Within this bulk of literature, studies have also investigated how violence is given meaning through narratives, memories, and various forms of popular culture. Yet the material turn • an exploration into the relationships between people and materialities • has not yet fully found its way into the sub- field of the anthropology of violence. This panel aims to address this by analysing how various objects and things shape the ways in which violence is experienced, performed, signified, and perpetuated. We thus aim to further understand violence through analyzing the social life of the materials of violence. More specifically, we aim to explore this relationship by focusing on ‘weapons’, i.e. objects that are predominantly used to inflict pain. Across the globe, different types of weapons, such as knives, bombs, and guns, are key objects in violence. How do weapons participate in and even drive violent actions? What are the different effects that weapons have on bodies, intentions, attitudes, and actions? How do weapons represent and enact a certain type of pain? How can we understand this contextual diversity, both across different sites and objects? How do weapons move through different political, economic, and social landscapes? This panel will reflect on these pertinent questions through diverse case- studies.

Downloads

Transcript English (automatic)

Next from AAA Annual Meeting 2021

The Performativity of the Gun: How Firearms' Technology and Symbolism Prompt Violent Subjectivities in Transnational Haiti
technical paper

The Performativity of the Gun: How Firearms' Technology and Symbolism Prompt Violent Subjectivities in Transnational Haiti

AAA Annual Meeting 2021

Chelsey Kivland

18 November 2021

Similar lecture

The Performativity of the Gun: How Firearms' Technology and Symbolism Prompt Violent Subjectivities in Transnational Haiti
technical paper

The Performativity of the Gun: How Firearms' Technology and Symbolism Prompt Violent Subjectivities in Transnational Haiti

AAA Annual Meeting 2021

Chelsey Kivland

18 November 2021

Stay up to date with the latest Underline news!

Select topic of interest (you can select more than one)

PRESENTATIONS

  • All Lectures
  • For Librarians
  • Resource Center
  • Free Trial
Underline Science, Inc.
1216 Broadway, 2nd Floor, New York, NY 10001, USA

© 2023 Underline - All rights reserved