Comprehending "Our" Violence: Reflections on the Liberal Universalist Tradition, National Identity and the War on Iraq

Q3 Social Sciences Muslim World Journal of Human Rights Pub Date : 2006-10-26 DOI:10.2202/1554-4419.1076
C. Choudhury
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

This essay presents some preliminary thoughts about the linkages between current human rights universalism and the practice of violence in the form of wars and interventions. I draw three parallels that may help us think about the current wars on terror and in Iraq. The first parallel concerns the progress of liberal universalist thought from the Enlightenment period in which a concern for rights coexisted with the justifications for imperialism. In the current era the succeeding line of universalist thought is that of human rights which similarly coexists with the overt and tacit support for violence that deprives some humans of their lives.The second parallel concerns the use of national identity. In the imperial era, the justification for rights either given or withheld was closely linked to constructions of national identity. Similarly, today there is a resurgence of nationalist discourse in which the construction of U.S. national identity is used to justify the violence that is done against Iraqi citizens. This discourse which constructs the U.S. as ontologically civilized and the Iraqis as barbarians is used to justify the violence that is done to them.Finally, the last parallel concerns violence in general. During imperialism, the scrutiny for acts of violence was borne largely by the native. Because he was constructed as a barbarian, his violence was made far more obvious as further evidence of his lesser development. In the present circumstances, a similar scrutiny is borne by the Iraqi insurgent while the violence of the coalition forces remains veiled beneath euphemisms like collateral damage. The torture scandal at Abu-Ghraib presented an opportunity to reverse the gaze but because of its interpretation as an aberration that falls squarely outside the ``normal" and the failure to widen the debate to other violence, this opportunity was largely lost.These three parallels taken together suggest that the old liberal hegemonic order of imperialism with its conflicting narratives of rights and oppression has been carried forward and sublimated into a human rights regime. And human rights is now deployed to justify violence against ``human rights abusers." Because of this continuity, there is a need to create a new universalism born organically from the struggles of subordinated peoples that eliminates old-order imperialist justifications for the oppression of Others while claiming to support human rights.
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理解“我们的”暴力:对自由普遍主义传统、国家认同和伊拉克战争的反思
本文提出了一些关于当前人权普遍主义与战争和干预形式的暴力实践之间联系的初步想法。我列举了三个相似之处,可能有助于我们思考当前的反恐战争和伊拉克战争。第一个平行点涉及启蒙时期以来自由普遍主义思想的发展,在启蒙时期,对权利的关注与为帝国主义辩护并存。在当今时代,普遍主义思想的后续路线是人权思想,这种思想同样与对剥夺某些人生命的暴力的公开和隐性支持共存。第二个相似之处涉及国家身份的使用。在帝制时代,赋予或剥夺权利的正当性与国家认同的建构密切相关。同样,今天民族主义话语又死气沉沉的,其中美国民族认同的建构被用来为针对伊拉克公民的暴力行为辩护。这种将美国建构为文明的本体论而将伊拉克人建构为野蛮人的话语被用来为对他们的暴力行为辩护。最后,最后一个相似之处涉及一般的暴力。在帝国主义时期,对暴力行为的审查主要由当地人承担。因为他被塑造成一个野蛮人,他的暴力行为更加明显,这进一步证明了他的发展程度较低。在目前的情况下,伊拉克叛乱分子也承受着类似的审视,而联军的暴力行为仍被掩盖在诸如附带损害之类的委婉说法之下。阿布格莱布监狱(Abu-Ghraib)的酷刑丑闻提供了一个扭转视线的机会,但由于将其解释为完全超出“正常”的反常行为,以及未能将辩论扩大到其他暴力行为,这个机会在很大程度上失去了。这三个相似之处合在一起表明,旧的帝国主义自由主义霸权秩序及其相互冲突的权利和压迫叙事已被发扬光大,并升华为一种人权制度。人权现在被用来为针对“人权侵犯者”的暴力辩护。由于这种连续性,有必要创造一种从从属人民的斗争中有机产生的新的普遍主义,这种普遍主义消除了旧秩序的帝国主义为压迫他人辩护的理由,同时声称支持人权。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
8
期刊介绍: Muslim World Journal of Human Rights promises to serve as a forum in which barriers are bridged (or at least, addressed), and human rights are finally discussed with an eye on the Muslim world, in an open and creative manner. The choice to name the journal, Muslim World Journal of Human Rights reflects a desire to examine human rights issues related not only to Islam and Islamic law, but equally those human rights issues found in Muslim societies that stem from various other sources such as socio-economic and political factors, as well the interaction and intersections of the two areas. MWJHR welcomes submissions that apply the traditional human right framework in their analysis as well as those that transcend the boundaries of contemporary scholarship in this regard. Further, the journal also welcomes inter-disciplinary and/or comparative approaches to the study of human rights in the Muslim world in an effort to encourage the emergence of new methodologies in the field. Muslim World Journal of Human Rights recognizes that several highly contested debates in the field of human rights have been reflected in the Muslim world but have frequently taken on their own particular manifestation in accordance with the varying contexts of contemporary Muslim societies.
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