Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) T. Kelly
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Global Academy of Agriculture and Food Systems University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK
ANO 2018
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Anthropological Theory
ISSN 1463-4996
E-ISSN 1741-2641
EDITORA Annual Reviews (United States)
DOI 10.1177/1463499617744475
CITAÇÕES 2
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 0c682c0edbe8d2e683b6ce98c3a7e636

Resumo

Is civility an end in itself, or a means to other ends? The relationship between means and ends marks theoretical debates about the meanings and implications of civility. This article addresses how these tensions played out in the context of the particular forms of civility promoted by pacifists in Second World War Britain. More specifically, it focuses on the experiences of those pacifists who set up community farms as a way to try and merge both means and ends through a form of sociality marked by love, mutual labour and conscience. The paper makes two arguments. First, the attempt to merge means and ends meant that the compromises of the present could be hard to overcome. The distinctly pacifist civility of Second World War Britain tended to reproduce particular middle class and masculine ways of being in the world. Second, it was the very tension between means and ends, however, that gave claims of pacifist civility fraught potency. For many British pacifists, pacifist forms of civility were an attempt to propose an alternative, not despite, but because of the space between their aspiration for cooperation and love, and the disappointments of experience. Pacifist civility was therefore understood as a form of potential. It is also important to note though that potentiality is marked by two possibilities: the potential to do; and the potential not to do. It is on this delicate balance between the inequities of the here and now and the aspired for future that pacifist civility stood.

Ferramentas