1st Edition

Times of Security Ethnographies of Fear, Protest and the Future

Edited By Martin Holbraad, Morten Axel Pedersen Copyright 2013
252 Pages
by Routledge

250 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

250 Pages 10 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

In the current world disorder, security is on everyone’s lips. But what is security from a cross-cultural perspective? How is it imagined and experienced by people on the ground? Crucially, what visions of the future are at stake in people’s potentially divergent concerns with security: what, and when, is the time of security ? Exploring diverse notions and experiences of time involved in... Read more

Foreword and Acknowledgments.  Introduction: Times of Security  Morten Axel Pedersen and Martin Holbraad  Defining Security in Late Liberalism: A Comment on Pedersen and Holbraad  Elizabeth A. Povinelli  1. Security Is a Collective Body: Intersecting Times of Security in the Copenhagen Climate Summit  Stine Krøijer  2. "Captured With Their Hands in the Dough": Insecurity, Safety-Seeking and Securitization in El Alto, Bolivia  Helene Risør  3. Readings of Time: Of Coca, Presentiment and Illicit Passage in Peru  Richard Kernaghan  4. Seizing Catastrophes: The Temporality of Nakba Among Palestinians in Denmark  Anja Kublitz  5. Enduring Presents: Living a Prison Sentence as the Wife of a Detainee in Israel Lotte Buch Segal  6. Parasecurity and Paratime in Serbia: Neurocortical Defence and National Consciousness  Maja Petrović-Šteger  7. Bad Weather: The Time of Planetary Crisis  Joseph Masco  8. Time Consciousness in North Korea’s State Security Discourse  Heonik Kwon  Afterword: Notes on Securitization and Temporality  Steffen Jensen and Finn Stepputat

Biography

Martin Holbraad is a Lecturer in Anthropology at University College London.

Morten Axel Pedersen is Professor of Anthropology at the University of Copenhagen.

"This edited book is central to the main currents of anthropological work on politics, and to the understanding of discourses of security. It addresses these bodies of literature, uniquely and creatively in the opinion of this reader, through a consideration of anthropological work on time and temporality — another lively and current key theme of much recent anthropology. Times of Security offers compelling ethnographies of security from a range of different geographical contexts, from South America to Europe and the Middle East, and at different scales, ranging from considerations of local contexts to nation states and even the planet in its entirety."

- Magnus Marsden, SOAS