Malksoo, Maria (2021) Militant Memocracy in International Relations: Mnemonical Status Anxiety and Memory Laws in Eastern Europe. Review of International Studies, TBD (TBD). ISSN 0260-2105. E-ISSN 1469-9044. (doi:TBC) (KAR id:87056)
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Official URL: https://www.doi.org/10.1017/S0260210521000140 |
Abstract
This article theorises the nexus between mnemonical status anxiety and militant memory laws. Extending the understanding of status-seeking in international relations to the realm of historical memory, I argue that the quest for mnemonical recognition is a status struggle in an international social hierarchy of remembering constitutive events of the past. A typology of mnemopolitical status-seeking is presented on the example of Russia (mnemonical positionalism), Poland (mnemonical revisionism), and Ukraine (mnemonical self-emancipation). Memory laws provide a common instance of securing and/or improving a state’s mnemonical standing in the relevant memory order. Drawing on the conceptual analogy of militant democracy, the article develops the notion militant memocracy, or the governance of historical memory through a dense network of prescribing and proscribing memory laws and policies. Alike its militant democracy counterpart, militant memocracy is in danger of self-inflicted harm to the object of defence in the very effort to defend it: its precautionary and punitive measures resound rather than fix the state’s mnemonical anxiety problem.
Item Type: | Article |
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DOI/Identification number: | TBC |
Uncontrolled keywords: | mnemonical status anxiety, memory laws, militant memocracy, Russia, Poland, Ukraine |
Subjects: | J Political Science > JZ International relations |
Divisions: | Divisions > Division of Human and Social Sciences > School of Politics and International Relations |
Depositing User: | Maria Malksoo |
Date Deposited: | 11 Mar 2021 07:02 UTC |
Last Modified: | 09 Dec 2022 02:07 UTC |
Resource URI: | https://kar.kent.ac.uk/id/eprint/87056 (The current URI for this page, for reference purposes) |
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