Remote warfare : new cultures of violence /
Considers how people have confronted, challenged and resisted remote warfare. Drone warfare is now a routine, if not predominant, aspect of military engagement. Although this method of delivering violence at a distance has been a part of military arsenals for two decades, scholarly debate on remote...
| Other Authors: | , |
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| Format: | Book |
| Language: | English |
| Published: |
Minneapolis :
University of Minnesota Press,
[2020]
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| Subjects: |
Table of Contents:
- Introduction: Rethinking Killing at a Distance
- Part 1. Visions. 1. ⁰́₋An Entirely New Method of Conducting War at a Distance⁰́₊ : The First World War and the Air War of the Future
- 2. Warrior Woundings, Warrior Culture : An Ethos for Post-9/11 American War Culture
- 3. From Hermeneutics to Archives : Parasites and Predators in Homeland
- 4. Eye in the Sky : Persistent Surveillance Technology and the Age of Global War
- Part 2. Intimacies. 5. Of Games and Drones: Mediating Traumatic Affect in the Age of Remote Warfare
- 6. Over There? War Writing, Lethal Technology, and Democracy in America
- 7. ⁰́₋Wanted Dead or Alive⁰́₊ : The Hunt for Osama bin Laden
- 8. Home, Away, Home : Remoteness and Intimacy in Contemporary Danish Veteran Literature
- Part 3. Reconfigurations. 9. Necrospace, Media, and Remote War : Ethnographic Notes from Lebanon and Pakistan, 2006-2008
- 10. Drones versus Drones : Ambient and Ambivalent Sounds against Remote Warfare
- 11. Bombs and Black Humor : Aerial Warfare and the Absurd
- 12. An Architecture against Dacoits : On Drones, Mosquitoes, and the Smart City.