What makes violence martial? Adopt A Sniper and normative imaginaries of violence in the contemporary United States

Author:

Millar Katharine M1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. London School of Economics and Political Science, UK

Abstract

What makes violence martial? Contemporary militarism scholarship, owing to an analytical overdetermination of the role of military institutions, frequently conflates martiality with violence writ large. Drawing upon the illustrative case of Adopt A Sniper, a US military support charity founded by police officers operating during the global war on terror and intended to help supporters ‘directly contribute to the killing of the enemy’, this article interrogates the intuitive ‘line’ between martial and other, particularly colonial, forms of violence. To do so, I develop the concept of ‘normative imaginaries of violence’ – articulations of intersubjective beliefs; political community; spatial geographies; gendered, sexualized, racialized and classed power relations; and logics of legitimation. Through this lens, and informed by the work of Frantz Fanon, the article demonstrates that though coloniality and martiality are deeply intertwined, they are neither reducible to nor epiphenomenal of each other. Through a juxtaposition of the titular sniper with two additional figures invoked by Adopt A Sniper – the militiaman and the vigilante – I outline a novel, genealogical method that enables us to trace the entangled histories of contemporary violences and identify the implicit politics of ordering at work in existing, often fragmented, analyses of political violence.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Political Science and International Relations,Sociology and Political Science

Reference53 articles.

1. AmericanSnipers.org (n.d. a) Homepage. Available at: Americansnipers.org (accessed 15 April 2015).

2. The Origins of Gun Culture in the United States, 1760-1865

3. Becoming war: Towards a martial empiricism

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