Pharmacotic wargames: Military play as ritual sacrifice
被引:0
|
作者:
Hirst, Aggie
论文数: 0引用数: 0
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机构:
Kings Coll London, Dept War Studies, Int Relat Theory & Methods, London, England
Kings Coll London, Strand Campus, London WC2R 2LS, EnglandKings Coll London, Dept War Studies, Int Relat Theory & Methods, London, England
Hirst, Aggie
[1
,4
]
George, Larry N.
论文数: 0引用数: 0
h-index: 0
机构:
Calif State Univ Long Beach, Polit Theory & Int Relat, Long Beach, CA USA
Calif State Univ Long Beach, Int Studies Program, Long Beach, CA USAKings Coll London, Dept War Studies, Int Relat Theory & Methods, London, England
George, Larry N.
[2
,3
]
机构:
[1] Kings Coll London, Dept War Studies, Int Relat Theory & Methods, London, England
[2] Calif State Univ Long Beach, Polit Theory & Int Relat, Long Beach, CA USA
[3] Calif State Univ Long Beach, Int Studies Program, Long Beach, CA USA
[4] Kings Coll London, Strand Campus, London WC2R 2LS, England
Critical theory;
games;
US military;
violence;
war;
wargames;
AMERICA-ARMY;
VIDEO GAMES;
WAR;
SECURITY;
GENDER;
D O I:
10.1177/09670106231212041
中图分类号:
D81 [国际关系];
学科分类号:
030207 ;
摘要:
This article argues that the analytic of pharmacotic war can render visible a logic of ritual sacrifice in the US military's use of games to attract, produce, and recycle war-fighters. Identifying the ancient framing of the pharmakon - a substance or process that functions as at once drug, poison, and cure - it shows how games function paradoxically to draw in, produce, and rehabilitate military life. The article makes this case by tracing the roots of Kenneth MacLeish's 'churn of mobilization and demobilization' beyond the military's instrumental calculations of institutional self-perpetuation, showing that this churn functions according to a logic of pharmacotic sacrifice that is not incidental to, but rather built into, their routine operation. It argues that (ex-)war-fighters function as a contemporary equivalent of the ancient pharmakoi, scapegoated and sacrificed figures into whom a polis poured its guilt and dysfunction in an act of ritual purification. Though rejecting any linear genealogy or transhistorical Western way of war, it identifies powerful resonances between the ancient pharmakoi and (ex-)war-fighters today. Drawing on extensive interviews with US military gamers and veterans, the article sheds light on the growing influence of games on the attraction, production, and recycling of (ex-)war-fighters in the 21st century. At the same time, by tracing the purificatory expulsion of war-fighters, it contributes a novel theorization of the pharmacotic logic of the US military's war-making apparatus.
机构:
Kings Coll London, Dept War Studies, Int Relat Theory & Methods, London, EnglandKings Coll London, Dept War Studies, Int Relat Theory & Methods, London, England