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E-raamat: Visual Security Studies: Sights and Spectacles of Insecurity and War

Edited by (University of Tampere, Finland), Edited by (Tampere University, Finland)
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The present volume engages visuality in security from a variety of angles and explores what the subfield of Visual Security Studies might be.

To structure this experimentation, and to encourage a more careful and multi-faceted approach to visuality and security, the main conceptual move in this volume is to envision three different transversal meeting points between security and visuality: visuality as a modality (active in representations and signs of security), visuality as practice (active in enacting security), and visuality as a method (active in investigating security). These three approaches structure the book together with three areas in which we see visuality as especially pertinent in relation to security: in security technologies that (en)vision security and are themselves the objects of visions of security; in spectacles of security and security spectatorship; and in ways of making security visible.

In this way, the volume works to sensitise International Relations research to visual forms of knowledge and practice by examining visual aspects of security. At the same time, it allows for debate on how this particular modality of the sensible not only affects what is visible and what is not, but also how authority and truth-claims come about, and how they are compared and evaluated. Through engagement with security via the ‘language’ or ‘code’ of the visual, it is possible to interrogate how scholars in the field understand visuality as well as the economy, grammar and performativity of visual articulation and the production of knowledge. The volume also examines how visuality can be used as a method in doing research, and as a way of presenting research results.

Visual Security Studies is not a new theory of security or its study; instead, the present volume suggests that visuality should be envisioned as an aspect of security studies that can be incorporated into pre-existing approaches. The aim is to highlight how much of contemporary practice is visual and to foster an increased attentiveness to visuality in security politics, security practice, and to the possibilities of employing visual research methods in security scholarship.

This book will be of much interest to students of critical security, media studies, surveillance studies, visual sociology, and IR in general.

List of illustrations
vii
Notes on contributors viii
Acknowledgements xi
1 Introduction: visual security studies
1(20)
Rune S. Andersen
Juha A. Vuori
PART I Visions of security technology/technological security vision
21(48)
2 Scalia.warhead1: securitization discourses in hacktivist video
23(15)
Adam Fish
3 The gaze, the drone dispositif, and necro-biographies: a brief conceptual intervention
38(14)
Michael J. Shapiro
4 CCTV oddity: on the archaeology and aesthetics of video surveillance
52(17)
Paolo Cardullo
James Stevens
PART II Security spectacles and spectatorship
69(62)
5 The humanity of war: iconic photojournalism of the battlefield, 1914-2012
71(20)
Lilie Chouliaraki
6 World Drug Day and visual rituals of security in West Africa
91(23)
Adam Sandor
7 Collaging Iranian missiles: digital security spectacles and visual online parodies
114(17)
Saara Sarma
PART III Making security visible
131(70)
8 Leonardo's security: the participant witness in a time of invisibility
133(17)
Frank Moller
9 Making norms visible: police uniforms and the social meaning of policing
150(21)
Xavier T. Guillaume
Juha A. Vuori
Rune S. Andersen
10 Auto-photographing (in)securities: former young female soldiers' post-war struggles in Monrovia
171(18)
Leena Vastapuu
11 Visual security: patterns and prospects
189(12)
Roland Bleiker
Index 201
Juha A. Vuori is acting Professor of International Politics at the University of Turku, and an Adjunct Professor of International Politics at the University of Tampere. He is the author of Critical Security and Chinese Politics (Routledge, 2014) and co-author of A History of the People's Republic of China (in Finnish, 2012).

Rune Saugmann Andersen is a post-doctoral fellow at University of Tampere and holds a PhD from the Center for Advanced Security Theory (CAST), University of Copenhagen.