Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) A. Wilson , Fritz Allhoff
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) University of Sussex
ANO 2019
TIPO Book
PERIÓDICO Conflict and Society
ISSN 2164-4543
E-ISSN 2164-4551
DOI 10.3167/arcs.2019.050109
CITAÇÕES 1
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 8553fbab3f79f932af74af8f9820a90a

Resumo

Those who have participated in organized political violence often develop distinctive identities as veteran combatants. But what possibilities exist to produce a veteran identity for 'invisible' veterans denied public recognition or mention, such as politically repressed defeated insurgents? Everyday socializing during or after political violence can help restore social worlds threatened or destroyed by violence; an examination of 'invisible' veteran defeated revolutionaries in Dhufar, Oman, shows how everyday socializing can help reproduce a distinctive veteran identity despite political repression. Ethnographic fieldwork with veteran militants from the defeated revolutionary liberation movement for Dhufar reveals that while veterans (who are a diverse group) no longer publicly reproduce their political and economic revolutionary ideals, some male veterans—through everyday, same-sex socializing—reproduce revolutionary ideals of social, especially tribal and ethnic, egalitarianism. These practices mark a distinctive veteran identity and indicate an 'afterlife' of lasting social legacies of defeated revolution.

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