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The Community of the Dispossessed: Women's Peace Coalition

Authorized Users Only
2019
Authors
Zaharijević, Adriana
Contributors
Pavlović, Aleksandar
Pudar Draško, Gazela
Halili, Rigels
Book part (Published version)
Metadata
Show full item record
Abstract
The text considers the possibility of establishing and maintaining alternative communities, taking as an example the Women's Peace Coalition between Kosovo Women Network and the Serbian Women in Black network. The principal question put forward is whether communities that surpass identitarian belonging are possible, and how these communities relate to “communities” determined territorially, nationally (by a nation state), as well as how they relate to artificial and symbolic supranational bodies. The main aim is the examination of the political potential of a community that wishes to be grounded on the logic of peace and the rejection of the logic of possession (following the slogan “people, not territories”). A community of women activists in the shape of the Women's Peace Coalition is defined as a community of the dispossessed, a term developed following the work of Judith Butler and Athena Athanasiou. This pregnant philosophical concept is introduced in order to offer a new approach... to the context of an ambivalent, divided, inoperative state, with long-festering wounds of war.

Keywords:
community / dispossession / Women's Peace Coalition / Kosovo Women's Network / Women in Black
Source:
Rethinking Serbian-Albanian Relations Figuring out the Enemy, 2019, 215-225
Publisher:
  • Routledge, London; Southeast European Studies Series
Funding / projects:
  • Figura neprijatelja: preosmišljavanje srpsko-albanskih odnosa, Regionalni program podrške istraživanjima u oblasti društvenih nauka na Zapadnom Balkanu (RRPP) / Figuring out the Enemy: Re-imagining Serbian-Albanian Relations, RRPP - Regional Research Promotion Programme - Western Balkans

DOI: 10.4324/9781351273169

ISBN: 9781351273152

[ Google Scholar ]
URI
http://rifdt.instifdt.bg.ac.rs/123456789/2176
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača
Institution/Community
IFDT
TY  - CHAP
AU  - Zaharijević, Adriana
PY  - 2019
UR  - http://rifdt.instifdt.bg.ac.rs/123456789/2176
AB  - The text considers the possibility of establishing and maintaining alternative communities, taking as an example the Women's Peace Coalition between Kosovo Women Network and the Serbian Women in Black network. The principal question put forward is whether communities that surpass identitarian belonging are possible, and how these communities relate to “communities” determined territorially, nationally (by a nation state), as well as how they relate to artificial and symbolic supranational bodies. The main aim is the examination of the political potential of a community that wishes to be grounded on the logic of peace and the rejection of the logic of possession (following the slogan “people, not territories”). A community of women activists in the shape of the Women's Peace Coalition is defined as a community of the dispossessed, a term developed following the work of Judith Butler and Athena Athanasiou. This pregnant philosophical concept is introduced in order to offer a new approach to the context of an ambivalent, divided, inoperative state, with long-festering wounds of war.
PB  - Routledge, London; Southeast European Studies Series
T2  - Rethinking Serbian-Albanian Relations Figuring out the Enemy
T1  - The Community of the Dispossessed: Women's Peace Coalition
SP  - 215
EP  - 225
DO  - 10.4324/9781351273169
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Zaharijević, Adriana",
year = "2019",
abstract = "The text considers the possibility of establishing and maintaining alternative communities, taking as an example the Women's Peace Coalition between Kosovo Women Network and the Serbian Women in Black network. The principal question put forward is whether communities that surpass identitarian belonging are possible, and how these communities relate to “communities” determined territorially, nationally (by a nation state), as well as how they relate to artificial and symbolic supranational bodies. The main aim is the examination of the political potential of a community that wishes to be grounded on the logic of peace and the rejection of the logic of possession (following the slogan “people, not territories”). A community of women activists in the shape of the Women's Peace Coalition is defined as a community of the dispossessed, a term developed following the work of Judith Butler and Athena Athanasiou. This pregnant philosophical concept is introduced in order to offer a new approach to the context of an ambivalent, divided, inoperative state, with long-festering wounds of war.",
publisher = "Routledge, London; Southeast European Studies Series",
journal = "Rethinking Serbian-Albanian Relations Figuring out the Enemy",
booktitle = "The Community of the Dispossessed: Women's Peace Coalition",
pages = "215-225",
doi = "10.4324/9781351273169"
}
Zaharijević, A.. (2019). The Community of the Dispossessed: Women's Peace Coalition. in Rethinking Serbian-Albanian Relations Figuring out the Enemy
Routledge, London; Southeast European Studies Series., 215-225.
https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351273169
Zaharijević A. The Community of the Dispossessed: Women's Peace Coalition. in Rethinking Serbian-Albanian Relations Figuring out the Enemy. 2019;:215-225.
doi:10.4324/9781351273169 .
Zaharijević, Adriana, "The Community of the Dispossessed: Women's Peace Coalition" in Rethinking Serbian-Albanian Relations Figuring out the Enemy (2019):215-225,
https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351273169 . .

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