Abstract

In this article, I ask three key questions: First, what is the relationship between militarism and race? Second, how does colonialism shape that relationship to produce racial militarism on both sides of the imperial encounter? And, third, what is the function of racial militarism? I build on Fanon’s psychoanalytic work on the production of racial hierarchies and internalization of stigma to argue that militarism became a means through which the European imperial nation-state sought to mitigate its civilizational anxiety and assert itself at the top of a constructed hierarchy. In particular, I argue that European militarism is constituted by its colonization and historical constructions of the so-called Muslim Orient, stigmatized as a rival, a threat and an inferior neighbour. However, this racial militarism and civilizational anxiety is not only a feature of the colonial metropole, but also transferred onto colonized and postcolonial states. Drawing on examples of racial militarism practised by the Syrian regime, I argue Europe’s racial-militarist stigmas are also internalized and instrumentalized by postcolonial states via fleeing and transferral. Throughout the article, I demonstrate that racial militarism has three main functions in both metropole and postcolony: the performance of racial chauvinism and superiority; demarcation of boundaries of exclusion; and dehumanization of racialized dissent in order to legitimate violence.

Highlights

  • What is the relationship between militarism and race? How do colonialism and war shape racial militarism on both sides of the imperial encounter? And what are the functions of racial militarism for the nation-state? These queries are prompted by a conspicuous lack of deeper theorizing in international relations on the nexus between racism and militarism, at least in its European context

  • Militarism cannot be fully understood without recognizing its co-constitution with race and dependence on a civilizational schema, both in the imperial metropole and in the postcolony

  • To demonstrate how that schema manifests in both contexts, I turned to Fanon’s discussion of racial hierarchy and the internalization of racial stigmas among the colonized, which is manifested in two ways: attempts to flee them by mimicking the ‘civilized’ European and attempts to transfer them onto an ‘Other’ within their own communities

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Summary

Introduction

What is the relationship between militarism and race? How do colonialism and war shape racial militarism on both sides of the imperial encounter? And what are the functions of racial militarism for the nation-state? These queries are prompted by a conspicuous lack of deeper theorizing in international relations on the nexus between racism and militarism, at least in its European context.And yet, despite the lacuna, it is clear from even a cursory comparison of definitions of racism and militarism that both share principles of supremacism and domination.racism is ‘the belief, practice, and policy of domination based on the specious concept of race’ (Henderson, 2014: 20), and is often supported by state power. Central to understanding how race and militarism are co-constituted is the construction of a civilizational schema based on racial hierarchies.

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