posted on 2021-02-15, 11:47authored byHannah Partis-Jennings, Henry Redwood
This article examines the relationship between war art and community formation. Building on Hutchison
(2016), Callahan (2020), Edkins (2003) and others, we are concerned with how the subject position of the war
artist, and their traumatic encounter with war, might disrupt understandings of community that underpin liberal
war making. Focusing on Mark Neville’s Battle Against Stigma, we show that making visible the embedded
constraint and complicity and the traumatic experiences of the war artist can constitute a form of imminent
critique; both rendering intelligible and destabilising the martial gaze and liberal military meaning making.
This offers contributions to IR by interrogating the processes through which war visuals both make and unmake
communities in relation to war trauma.
This is an Accepted Manuscript of an article published by Taylor & Francis in Critical Studies on Security on 26 Jan 2021, available online: https://doi.org/10.1080/21624887.2021.1875711