Balkan subjects in intervention literature: the politics of overrepresentation and reconstruction

Katarina Kušić*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Postcolonial and decolonial critiques have highlighted the absence of non-Western people as active agents of politics from IR scholarship. These subjects, however, are present as constitutive others in narratives of liberalism, peace, and modernity. This article engages the traces of this presence by focusing on Balkan subjects in intervention literature that studies the far-reaching international involvement in Southeast Europe (SEE) since the 1990s. The article centres on two dimensions of Balkan subjecthood, antipolitics and positioning vis-à-vis Europe, found in two innovative texts that deal with international presence in the Balkans: Lene Hansen’s Security as Practice: Discourse analysis and the Bosnian war (2006) and Elizabeth Dauphinée’s The Politics of Exile (2013). In reconstructing the two dimensions of Balkan subjecthood, the article argues that provincialising IR from SEE requires breaking with the use of postcolonial thought as analogy in the region; it involves encounters with complex difference; and it commands rethinking what kind of knowledge is valorised in IR.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)910-931
Number of pages22
JournalJournal of International Relations and Development
Volume24
Issue number4
Early online date21 Aug 2021
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 31 Dec 2021

Keywords

  • Balkans
  • Eurocentrism
  • peacebuilding
  • statebuilding
  • subjects

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