2020
DOI: 10.1177/1354066120946467
|View full text |Cite
|
Sign up to set email alerts
|

Trickstery: pluralising stigma in international society

Abstract: International politics is often imagined via a binary opposition between the oppressor and the oppressed. Attention to entrenched hierarchies of power is essential in the study of international politics. However, taking this division too rigidly can obfuscate the very mechanisms of power that must be understood in order to grasp these hierarchies. We identify one such mechanism in the practice of trickstery, particularly as practiced in the context of Russia’s ambivalent and conflicted place in international s… Show more

Help me understand this report

Search citation statements

Order By: Relevance

Paper Sections

Select...
2
1
1
1

Citation Types

0
10
0

Year Published

2020
2020
2023
2023

Publication Types

Select...
7
1
1

Relationship

0
9

Authors

Journals

citations
Cited by 18 publications
(10 citation statements)
references
References 64 publications
(86 reference statements)
0
10
0
Order By: Relevance
“…With the change or demise of the so-called liberal order (Ikenberry 2018;Eilstrup-Sangiovanni and Hofmann 2019), many normative 'advancements' appear to be contested and reversible. The emerging research programs on normative contestation (Wiener 2018), regional specificities and interwoven global-regional dynamics (Acharya 2017;Kurowska and Reshetnikov 2020), and cultural diversity (Reus-Smit 2017; Phillips and Reus-Smit 2020) enable constructivist researchers to make sense of these dynamics. Future theoretical developments could spell out more precisely the conditions of peaceful versus violent change.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…With the change or demise of the so-called liberal order (Ikenberry 2018;Eilstrup-Sangiovanni and Hofmann 2019), many normative 'advancements' appear to be contested and reversible. The emerging research programs on normative contestation (Wiener 2018), regional specificities and interwoven global-regional dynamics (Acharya 2017;Kurowska and Reshetnikov 2020), and cultural diversity (Reus-Smit 2017; Phillips and Reus-Smit 2020) enable constructivist researchers to make sense of these dynamics. Future theoretical developments could spell out more precisely the conditions of peaceful versus violent change.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Research also indicates there is a high prevalence of conspiracy reasoning in Russian political and media discourses and mass culture (Wijermars, 2020a; Borenstein, 2019;Yablokov, 2015Yablokov, , 2018. A final frame emerging from the literature is the rhetorical strategy of overidentification with liberal norms, including rule of law, which has been demonstrated in Russian diplomacy (Kurowska & Reshetnikov, 2021). The validity of these frames was tested through a manual reading of a sample of the media corpus.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rule of law: this frame emphasizes legislation and compliance. With regards to Russian diplomacy, Kurowska and Reshetnikov (2021) argue that Russia's contradictory, mocking or even blatantly false public statements are best understood through the concept of trickery, in which overidentification with liberal norms (sovereignty; the equality of states) takes center stage (for example, in Russia's invocation of international legal norms to justify its military intervention in Georgia in 2008). The overidentification is effective in levelling out power relations and undermining these very norms, since '[c]alls for strict compliance put on public display the structural hegemony and quotidian hypocrisy of those liberal actors who profess but routinely breach liberal norms' (Kurowska & Reshetnikov, 2021, p. 12).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Kurowska and Reshetnikov refer to Russia's "trickster practice of 'overidentification' with norms, which apparently endorses but indirectly subverts the normative frameworks within which it is performed." 92 Self-evidently, the argument of parody as contestation can be analytically challenging. While offering a revealing perspective, it may be problematic when it is simply assumed that Russia's imitation of norms is driven by the consistent intention to mock them, while the same question is not asked about other actors referring to similar norms.…”
Section: Situating Russia As Norm Contestermentioning
confidence: 99%