Perspectives on War: The Front
VOLUME 5 NUMBER 1 JAUNUARY 2008
Introduction:
Notes on the Front
While InterCulture's editorial board wanted
to devote an issue towards clarifying the borders of war, specifically
in relation to the concept of the front, many of the essays we received
did something else. Marc Lafleur in “"The Bomb and the
Bombshell: The Body as Virtual Battlefront"” points out
that once the question of permanent war enters into culture, there
exists an urgent need to define the limits of that permanence in
order to preserve some form of resistance (29). The goal of clarifying
what constitutes the front of war results from the increasing realization
that the battlefront is everywhere. Given this context, a more prescient
objective would be to attempt to locate the politics within (borrowing
from David Harvey's terminology) the uneven spatial, social, and
cultural development of permanent warfare. The concept of the front
provides a means through which this exploration may occur. Together,
the following essays create a working vocabulary that begins to
explore the emergence of the front from historical, sociological,
philosophical, political, anthropological and literary perspectives.
See
It Now,
the Atomic Drug Store and Las Vegas: At Home in the Cold War
7
Dinah Zeiger
Playing
War
16
Ken MacLeish
The
Bomb and the Bombshell: The Body as Virtual Battlefront
23
Marc Lafleur
Conceptualizing
the Embodied Front: An Analysis of Born on the Fourth
of July
33
Christina Weber
Narratives:
The Front Line of Identity Politics
43
Christian Noll
Perceptions
of the Front By Serbian Civilians During the First World War,
53
1914 –- 1918
Bogdan Trifunović
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