The ongoing conflict in the war on terrorism puts two emblematic modes of violence into sharp relief: the drone, as an ostensibly rational, clinical and measured weapon of war, and suicide bombings, frequently portrayed as the horrid deeds of fanatics. In this article, I seek to challenge this juxtaposition and instead suggest that both modalities of killing are part of the same technologically-mediated ecology of violence. To do this, I examine the material-semiotic assemblage of the drone and of the suicide bomber, paying attention to the technological production of each mode of violence, as well as the narratives that render each figure intelligible in the war on terrorism. I argue that the strongly divergent narratives found in Western ...
Western use of military violence is becoming increasingly centralised, partly through the use of Unm...
This article addresses the problem of drone violence that is ‘grey’ in the sense of being hard to ca...
The discursive framing of the ‘war on terror’ was secured through fear of one key figure: the irrati...
How is language tactically used to legitimize violence? How are political and religious discourses a...
ABSTRACT: Suicide bombing remains by far the most lethal weapon readily available to terrorist group...
In the context of the international fight against terrorism, nations continue to target and kill peo...
As military technologies progress at a pace that challenges human cognitive and reasoning capacities...
Debates about terrorism and technology often focus on the potential uses of technology by non-state ...
Abstract As military technologies progress at a pace that challenges human cognitive and reasoning c...
The concept ‘targeted killing’ has been increasingly adopted in scholarship, policy and media discou...
The so called ‘war on terror’ was framed through fear of one key figure, the fanatical ‘suicide bomb...
Debates about today’s unmanned systems explain their operation using binary distinctions to delimit ...
The persistence of drone warfare despite years of anti-drone activism suggests a need to rethink pre...
This article explores the shifting methods of U.S. state violence. Building on their earlier work, t...
The use of unmanned aerial vehicles or “drones,” as part of the United States’ (US) targeted killing...
Western use of military violence is becoming increasingly centralised, partly through the use of Unm...
This article addresses the problem of drone violence that is ‘grey’ in the sense of being hard to ca...
The discursive framing of the ‘war on terror’ was secured through fear of one key figure: the irrati...
How is language tactically used to legitimize violence? How are political and religious discourses a...
ABSTRACT: Suicide bombing remains by far the most lethal weapon readily available to terrorist group...
In the context of the international fight against terrorism, nations continue to target and kill peo...
As military technologies progress at a pace that challenges human cognitive and reasoning capacities...
Debates about terrorism and technology often focus on the potential uses of technology by non-state ...
Abstract As military technologies progress at a pace that challenges human cognitive and reasoning c...
The concept ‘targeted killing’ has been increasingly adopted in scholarship, policy and media discou...
The so called ‘war on terror’ was framed through fear of one key figure, the fanatical ‘suicide bomb...
Debates about today’s unmanned systems explain their operation using binary distinctions to delimit ...
The persistence of drone warfare despite years of anti-drone activism suggests a need to rethink pre...
This article explores the shifting methods of U.S. state violence. Building on their earlier work, t...
The use of unmanned aerial vehicles or “drones,” as part of the United States’ (US) targeted killing...
Western use of military violence is becoming increasingly centralised, partly through the use of Unm...
This article addresses the problem of drone violence that is ‘grey’ in the sense of being hard to ca...
The discursive framing of the ‘war on terror’ was secured through fear of one key figure: the irrati...