Creating a state: A Kleinian reading of recognition in Zimbabwe’s regional relationships

Main author: Gallagher, Julia
Format: Journal Article           
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id eprints-26244
recordtype eprints
institution SOAS, University of London
collection SOAS Research Online
language English
language_search English
description This article contributes to recent debates about mutual recognition between states, and, more broadly, to discussions of the role of emotion in International Relations. It challenges ‘moral claims’ made in some of the literature that interstate recognition leads to a progressive erosion of difference or a pooling of identity, and underlying assumptions that recognition constitutes a stage in the development of states that have already established internal coherence. Instead, it claims that processes of recognition are fractious and unstable, characterised by aggression and self-assertion, as well as affection and the creation of a ‘we-feeling’, and that such processes are an enduring feature of state identity. Using the case of Zimbabwe — a state that is clearly fractured, with an apparently insecure collective identity — the article explores how recognition both challenges and reinforces state selfhood through dynamics that are bumpy, intense and unstable. It moves on to develop a theoretical interpretation of these dynamics by drawing on the work of psychoanalyst Melanie Klein, showing links between individual psychic anxiety and collective need for a state that exists uneasily but inextricably in relation to others. The article concludes that international recognition works as a way both to establish and to challenge state coherence.
format Journal Article
author Gallagher, Julia
author_facet Gallagher, Julia
authorStr Gallagher, Julia
author_letter Gallagher, Julia
title Creating a state: A Kleinian reading of recognition in Zimbabwe’s regional relationships
publisher Sage
publishDate 2016
url https://eprints.soas.ac.uk/26244/