Death and Security: Memory and Mortality at the Bombsite
Death and Security: Memory and Mortality at the Bombsite
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Abstract
Death is simultaneously silent, and very loud, in political life. Politicians and media scream about potential threats lurking behind every corner, but academic discourse often neglects mortality. Life is everywhere in theorisation of security, but death is nowhere.Making a bold intervention into the Critical Security Studies literature, this book explores the ontological relationship between mortality and security after the Death of God – arguing that security emerged in response to the removal of promises to immortal salvation. Combining the mortality theories of Heidegger and Bauman with literature from the sociology of death, Heath-Kelly shows how security is a response to the death anxiety implicit within the human condition.The book explores the theoretical literature on mortality before undertaking a comparative exploration of the memorialisation of four prominent post-terrorist sites: the World Trade Center in New York, the Bali bombsite, the London bombings and the Norwegian sites attacked by Anders Breivik. By interviewing the architects and designers of these reconstruction projects, Heath-Kelly shows that practices of memorialization are a retrospective security endeavour – they conceal and re-narrate the traumatic incursion of death. Disaster recovery is replete with security practices that return mortality to its sublimated position and remove the disruption posed by mortality to political authority.The book will be of significant interest to academics and postgraduates working in the fields of Critical Security Studies, Memory Studies and International Politics.
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Front Matter
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Introduction: death and security – the only two certainties
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1
The problem of dying while resilient
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2
Containing the spectacle: disaster management
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3
Reflecting absence? Disaster recovery and the World Trade Center
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4
Reclaiming place and self-harming architecture: Norwegian experiences of death and security
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5
Mutating disaster space: itinerant death at the Ground Zero Mosque and Bali bombsite
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6
Bombs without bombsites: memory and security without visibility
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Conclusion: pathologising security through Lacanian desire
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End Matter
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