Political violence within army barracks: desertion and loss among exiled Zimbabwean soldiers in South Africa |
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Authors: | Godfrey Maringira |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Anthropology &2. Sociology, University of the Western Cape, Cape Town, South Africa |
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Abstract: | While studies on soldiers who leave the army have focused on them as perpetrators of political violence in war and peace, little is known about the ways in which soldiers have been subjected to violence. This paper examines the ways in which Zimbabwe National Army deserters who are currently in exile in South Africa experienced politically inspired violence in the army barracks and the ways in which they mediate and reify it through the image of the “torn underwear.” The ‘torn underwear’ signifies the violence experienced in the army barracks but also represents its reification in their present exile condition and the ways in which it is embedded in the body psyche. In analysing the army barracks as a ‘total institution’ and as a ‘surveillance unit,’ the paper, respectively, situates itself in the discussions of Goffman and Foucault, drawing from life history interviews and conversations with deserters who live in exile in South Africa. |
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Keywords: | barracks deserters memory political violence soldier |
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