"You do not live in my skin”: Embodiment, voice and the veteran
Bulmer, Sarah; Jackson, David
Date: 18 December 2015
Article
Journal
Critical Military Studies
Publisher
Taylor and Francis
Publisher DOI
Abstract
In this paper we challenge the fundaments of academic engagement with, and representation of, veterans’ embodied experiences. Drawing on work we have undertaken at a number of recent conferences to open up the format of academic discourse to a more dialogue oriented form of engagement, we try to bring the same principles and problems ...
In this paper we challenge the fundaments of academic engagement with, and representation of, veterans’ embodied experiences. Drawing on work we have undertaken at a number of recent conferences to open up the format of academic discourse to a more dialogue oriented form of engagement, we try to bring the same principles and problems into written discourse. This paper weaves between the monologic form of academic argument, and the open explorative form of the dialogue, in an attempt to question core assumptions about veteran identity. Both of us are concerned with the politics of claims to ‘know’ the veteran experience by researchers, policymakers and the media. The paper is an attempt to take seriously a politics of embodiment, of voice, and of listening as a way of fundamentally reorienting what we think we ‘know’ about veteran experience and how we go about our research. Above all this paper is an intervention. It is an attempt to go beyond using notions of ‘embodiment’ as a heuristic device, and to operationalise this analytic in a challenge to the limits and possibilities of academic forms of representation. We argue that we need new ways of generating knowledge about embodied experience and a different understanding of what knowing means in this context. We propose ‘the conversation’ as an alternative mode of research praxis.
Social and Political Sciences, Philosophy, and Anthropology
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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