Towards an everyday peace? Exploring the political significance of everyday life in post-war Nepal
Abstract
This thesis aims to further our understanding of the political significance of everyday life in post-war Nepal. Building on the ethnographic turn of the everyday peace literature, I treat everyday life as a site of political potentiality as I explore how (if at all) this potentiality is practised in the context of post-war Nepal. Through an engagement with four specific empirical sites in post-war Nepal – and in close conversation with an interdisciplinary literature on post-war everyday life – I suggest three distinct (yet inter-related) ways of thinking about the political significance of everyday life in post-war Nepal, namely: as subtle politics; as not-necessarily-agential politics, and finally: as apolitical politics. First, the subtle politics of post-war everyday life is to be understood as related to its somewhat ephemeral – or hidden – qualities. Thus, what transpires in everyday life may not necessarily be widely registered as political, yet, it may still hold political significance, as argued throughout the course of this thesis. In fact, I argue that its hidden qualities may be part and parcel of what enables everyday practices and narratives to have political significance in otherwise politically volatile post-war settings. Second, the not-necessarily-agential politics of everyday life should be read as a call to move beyond the study of political agency in deciphering the political significance of post-war everyday life. As such, in this study I make the case that we should also look towards the consequences of specific practices in order to come to a more comprehensive understanding of the politics of post-war everyday life. Third, the apolitical politics of everyday life refers to the notion that post-war daily life appears to often operate according to a logic which somewhat transcends conventional party politics, where the maintenance of community and normality instead appear as the primary organizing principles. This does not mean that everyday life cannot be read as political as well, but it is merely to say that its political significance oftentimes come across as subordinate to this master logic which is focused on ‘making do’ in post-war everyday life.
Parts of work
Lundqvist, Martin and Joakim Öjendal (2018). ‘Atomised and Subor¬dinated? Unpacking the Role of International Involvement in “the Local Turn” of Peacebuilding in Nepal and Cambodia’. Journal of Peacebuilding & Develop¬ment 13(2): 16-30
::doi::10.1080/15423166.2018.1470023 Lundqvist, Martin (2019). ‘Post-war memorialisation as everyday peace? Exploring everyday (dis-) engagements with the Maoist martyrs’ gate of Beni Bazaar in Nepal’. Conflict, Security & Development 19(5): 475-496
::doi::10.1080/14678802.2019.1658970 Lundqvist, Martin (Unpublished work). ‘Spoiling the everyday? Navi¬gating everyday life amidst political violence in post-war Nepal’ Lundqvist, Martin (2020). ‘Nep-hop for peace? Political visions and divisions in the booming Nepalese hip-hop scene’. International Journal of Cul¬tural Studies. First published online 13 December 2020
::doi::10.1177/1367877920978658
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Samhällsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Social Sciences
Institution
School of Global Studies, Peace and Development Research ; Institutionen för globala studier, freds- och utvecklingsforskning
Disputation
26 februari 2021, klockan 13:15 i Linnésalen, Mediehuset, Campus Linné, Seminariegatan 1B, Göteborg.
Date of defence
2021-02-26
martin.lundqvist@gu.se
View/ Open
Date
2021-02-04Author
Lundqvist, Martin
Keywords
everyday life
audience studies
everyday peace
Nepal
peacebuilding
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-8009-202-9
978-91-8009-203-6
Language
eng