1st Edition

Battlestar Galactica and International Relations

Edited By Nicholas J. Kiersey, Iver B Neumann Copyright 2013
240 Pages
by Routledge

236 Pages
by Routledge

240 Pages
by Routledge

Looking at a television franchise like Battlestar Galactica (BSG) is no longer news within the discipline of International Relations. A growing number of scholars in and out of IR are studying the importance of cultural artifacts – popular or otherwise – for the phenomena that make up the core of our discipline. The genre of science fiction offers the analyst an opportunity that cannot be... Read more
1. Introduction  2.Critical Humanism: Theory, Methodology, and Battlestar Galactica  3.Religion in Sort of a Global Sense’: The Relevance of Religious Practices for Political Community in Battlestar Galactica and Beyond  4.Narrating identity, techno-rational subsumption and micropolitics in International Relations and Battlestar Galactica  5.Machines that Matter: The Politics and Ethics of ‘Unnatural’ Bodies 6. Critical Reflections on Battlestar Galactica and the Hyperreal Genocide 7. So Say Who All? Cosmopolitanism, Hybridity, and Colonialism in the Re-Imagined Battlestar Galactica 8.Security or Human Security? Civil-Military Relations in Battlestar Galactica. 9. Cylons in Baghdad: Experiencing Counter-Insurgency in Battlestar Galactica 10.Seeing Others: Battlestar Galactica’s Portrayal of Insurgents at a Time of War  11. Conclusion

Biography

Nicholas J. Kiersey is Professor of Political Science at the University of Texas Rio Grande Valley, USA.

Iver B. Neumann is Director of the Fridtjof Nansen Institute, Norway.