Post-War Identification. Torsten Kolind

Post-War Identification - Torsten Kolind


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important background knowledge for my later fieldwork in Stolac. It meant that I was already familiar with relevant cultural categories, personal stories about loss, strategies of resistance, repression and acceptance of ethnic thinking. And perhaps most importantly, the research in Denmark put my Stolac data into perspective, enabling me to see how fierce and unambiguous ethnic denunciation thrives best in exile, probably because people then do not have to live with the consequences of their own actions in quite the same way. In addition, socialising with Bosnian asylum applicants gave me a chance to practise my Serbo-Croatian.

      Chapter 1

      Anthropological perspectives on war and war-related violence

      In this chapter, I identify important perspectives in contemporary studies of war and war-related violence, and place my own research in relation to these. The perspectives used, which I have labelled instrumentality/structure, expression and experience/narrative, have developed in relation to and at times as critiques of each other; they are not necessarily mutually exclusive, but reflect focuses on different phases of war and war-related violence. The first perspective attempts to explain the outbreak of war and violent acts; the second centres on the cultural meaning of violent events; and the last represents experiences with and narratives of violence, focusing on the effects of violence. The perspectives also reflect different analytical levels, falling from a macro to a micro level, which, some would claim, relates to the possibility of empirical comparison (Schröder and Schmidt 2001), an argument reminiscent of the ‘verstehen’ – ‘erklären’ contrast.

      Instrumentality/structure

      The anthropological literature on war and violence reflects broader developments in anthropological theory, in which the critique of evolutionistic and functionalistic theories has given way to theories focusing on the relation between structure and strategy. Functional explanations of war (Gluckman 1955; Turner 1956; Ferguson 1984; Vayda and Rappaport 1968) have been abandoned, and though evolutionary theories of violence are still present in contemporary anthropology (Keegan 1994; Carneiro 1996; Reyna 1994; Abbink 2001), many explanations favour at least some degree of agency/structure.

      Instrumentality

      The instrumentalist approach to violence sometimes fails to notice that even though violence is a possible power strategy for local elites, strategic action is affected by broader global systemic processes. Mass communication and mass immigration have made local identification problematic; and along with growth in the global weapons industry and the rise in long-distance nationalism, this has increased the very potential for conflict (Anderson 1992; Turton 1997). Another dimension that fits into the instrumentalist perspective but which is also often neglected is that wars, even if they are the outcome of strategic considerations, often create their own complex dynamic, inasmuch as war tends to develop into a kind of mental framework in which physical violence occurs. Bax (2000a; 2000b), for instance, describes how in Herzegovina already existing local conflicts escalate, change, and form their own dynamic in a war situation, because local leaders perceive the war as a framework for solving existing conflict by new means. War then comes to serve the different purposes of many actors, which may in turn account for the difficulties of putting an end to wars.

      Structure

      The instrumentalist approach, which focuses on the strategic use of violence, conflicts with structural theories; however, I have grouped them together because they both attempt to explain the origin of war and violence. Structurally inspired anthropological analyses of war and war-related violence have primarily focused on the inherent potential of violence and war to create identities. In a condensed form, the line of reasoning goes like this: Identity is built on difference, and when differences become too small, identity becomes threatened and violence then recreates or reinforces differences. This is Blok’s (2000) argument, for instance: following Freud, he calls violent practices aimed at destroying similarities and thereby creating the Other, the: “narcissism of minor differences.” As he writes in respect to the eruption of war in former Yugoslavia:

      Once more we see the working of the narcissism of minor differences: the erosion and loss of distinctions and differences result in violence. (ibid. 41).

      Violence as a technique to create the Other is also present in Malkki’s (1998) study of Hutu narratives of Tutsi violence:

      Through violence, bodies of individual persons become metamorphosed into specimens of the ethnic category for which they are supposed to stand. (ibid. 88; original italics).

      Violence, it is argued, creates the structural division on which identity is built: we are us because we fight against them, and vica versa. Consider also Harrison’s (1993) claim that violence in Melanesia has a structural function − that is, groups do not create war, war creates groups. As he sees it, both gift giving and violence create social relations, which are contrary to the view of Mauss, who saw violence as the failure of the gift (Corbey 2000, 2006). Sorabji (1995) has argued that the logic of the violence in many parts of Bosnia Herzegovina was to de-personalise social relations and annihilate existing cultural values of neighbourliness in order to install an ideology of nationalism. The violence was therefore often rather extreme and furthermore performed in local settings, so as to destroy the memory of ethnic coexistence. In a study of ethnic cleansing in Bosnia-Herzegovina, Hayden (1996) follows a different, but still structural approach. Inspired by Mary Douglas, he claims


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