Cookies?
Library Header Image
LSE Research Online LSE Library Services

The body weaponized: war, sexual violence and the uncanny

Kirby, Paul (2020) The body weaponized: war, sexual violence and the uncanny. Security Dialogue, 51 (2-3). 211 - 230. ISSN 0967-0106

[img] Text (The body weaponized) - Accepted Version
Download (575kB)

Identification Number: 10.1177/0967010619895663

Abstract

It is today common to argue that rape is a weapon, tool or instrument of warfare. One implication is that armed groups marshal body parts for tactical and strategic ends. In this article, I interrogate this discourse of embodied mobilization to explore how body weaponry has been made intelligible as a medium for sexual violence. First, I show that, despite wide rejection of essentialist models, the penis and penis substitutes continue to occupy a constitutive role in discussions of sexual violence in both political and academic fora, where they are often said to be like weapons, a tendency I term ‘weapon talk’. Second, I trace the image of the body weapon in key threads of feminist theorizing and commentary, to show how the penis has appeared as a ‘basic weapon of force’ in various permutations. Third, I explore the weaponization of the body as it appears in military thought and in the cultural circulation of ideas about the soldiering body in which sexual pleasure and violence are frequently conflated. Building on this foundation, I propose that these literatures collectively describe an uncanny weapon object, and I draw out the significance of this term for feminist security studies and martial empiricism. In short, the uncanny haunts accounts of sexual violence in the collision of sexuality and machinery in the image of a body weapon, in the unsettling designation of sexuality as itself both familiar and dangerous, and in the strange movement of violent bodies across the boundary between wartime and peacetime. A concluding discussion draws out implications and challenges for thinking about embodied violence, advocating renewed attention to the history of weaponization as a fallible and confounding process.

Item Type: Article
Official URL: https://journals.sagepub.com/home/sdi
Additional Information: © 2020 The Author
Divisions: IGA: Centre for Women Peace and Security
Subjects: H Social Sciences > HQ The family. Marriage. Woman
J Political Science > JZ International relations
Date Deposited: 13 Nov 2019 09:09
Last Modified: 06 Apr 2024 22:00
URI: http://eprints.lse.ac.uk/id/eprint/102519

Actions (login required)

View Item View Item

Downloads

Downloads per month over past year

View more statistics