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Life, embodiment and (post)war stories: Studying narrative in critical military studies

journal contribution
posted on 2023-08-30, 15:51 authored by Nick Caddick
This paper argues for an expanded conceptualization of narrative as a tool for research in critical military studies. Narrative provides a means of studying the human experience of war as simultaneously ‘embodied’ and ‘storied’, but only if the underpinning conceptual framework can address both aspects. The paper introduces a conceptual synthesis of war, narrative, and the body that aims to bridge existing work on narrative within critical military studies with nascent research on war and embodiment. Drawing on the socio-narratology of Arthur Frank, three core ideas are offered as the basis for an embodied study of narrative in CMS. Together, these ideas demonstrate the value of narrative inquiry for providing detailed, contextualized, and nuanced analyses of war and post-war experiences. Stories are performative: they do things. War and post-war stories have personal and political consequences that effect how individuals and societies deal with war’s legacy and approach future conflicts. What kind of story we tell about war therefore matters deeply. Studying narrative in the form of embodied war stories expands CMS’s resources for critically engaging with matters of war, violence, and military experience.

History

Refereed

  • Yes

Volume

7

Issue number

2

Page range

155-172

Publication title

Critical Military Studies

ISSN

2333-7494

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

File version

  • Accepted version

Language

  • eng

Legacy posted date

2018-11-27

Legacy creation date

2018-11-27

Legacy Faculty/School/Department

Faculty of Health, Education, Medicine & Social Care

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