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| Funder | European Commission |
|---|---|
| Recipient Organization | Universiteit Gent |
| Country | Belgium |
| Start Date | Jun 01, 2023 |
| End Date | Dec 31, 2028 |
| Duration | 2,040 days |
| Number of Grantees | 1 |
| Roles | Coordinator |
| Data Source | European Commission |
| Grant ID | 101078339 |
VIOLENCE WORK is a groundbreaking study of everyday violence in Belgian Central AfricaBurundi, Congo, and Rwanda (19th-20th C).
Though colonial violence has been studied widely, few have explored how everyday violence enabled colonialism and allowed it to persist.
This project combines hitherto neglected source materials and a novel conceptual entry pointviolence work(ers)to foreground the everyday violent practices crucial to creating and maintaining the colonial state.
The projects core claim, and main innovation, is that violence work was not performed exclusively by formal violence workersthe men in uniformbut rather by a range of actors (colonizer and colonized) in- and outside the state.
Everyday violence work includes not only direct acts of physical violence (e.g., whipping) but also other forms of punishment, such as incarceration and coercion through the threat of violence, as well as subtler forms of aggression forcing compliance (e.g., harassment) and the ways these different levels of violence reinforced each other.
This inclusive definition enables an unprecedented, comprehensive view of the enforcement practices that colonial rule depended on.
VIOLENCE WORK opens up new questions about the centrality of violence in theorizing, creating, and maintaining colonialism and the colonial state.
This first in-depth, multi-sited, transnational/regional comparative study of everyday colonial violence will undergird further research on how colonial legacies persist and interact with local and new repertoires of violence work, contributing to dismantling persistent colonial myths about these regions and their inhabitants as inherently violent.
The online database will be a crucial tool for future researchers and open up many new avenues of research.
Its major innovation of a pluralistic approach to everyday violence work will reinvigorate the debate not only about colonial violence but also, ultimately, about colonial states and nation-states more broadly.
Universiteit Gent
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