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5 - Between the Nationalists and the Fundamentalists, Still We Have Hope!
- Edited by Jordan McKenzie, University of Wollongong, Australia, Roger Patulny, University of Wollongong, Australia
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- Book:
- Dystopian Emotions
- Published by:
- Bristol University Press
- Published online:
- 13 May 2022
- Print publication:
- 13 December 2021, pp 89-103
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- Chapter
- Export citation
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Summary
Introduction
In this chapter we will focus on the relationship between affect and utopian and dystopian politics in contemporary post-war Sri Lanka. We make three main claims: first, that affect plays a crucial role in Sri Lankan politics and this has been underestimated and addressed by many liberal and progressive political actors. Second, the relationship between affect and politics is both locally contextual but also not something that applies only to non-Western societies that are often treated as having ‘dysfunctional’ or ‘immature’ politics. Third, while the dominant affective landscape feeds a dystopian vision of politics, there are also forms of utopian politics that are building alternative affective communities. These alternatives highlight both the embodied and the concrete nature of utopian political action that refute the characterization of utopianism as abstract and unrealistic.
To support these arguments our chapter consists of two core parts. First, in highlighting the importance of engaging with the affective dimension of politics in contemporary Sri Lanka we seek to bring into conversation two separate bodies of literature. First, the anthropological literature that has highlighted the role that ritual and myth have played in grounding and sustaining past political violence in Sri Lanka (Tambiah, 1986; Kapferer, 1988, 2001; Spencer, 2007) and that continue to influence contemporary political discourse (Ambos, 2015; Gunatilleke, 2018). Second, the theoretical work – focused mainly on the West – that has sought to trace the role that emotion plays in politics of domination, exclusion, oppression and resistance (Connolly, 2002; Ahmed, 2004; Berlant, 2011). In the process we present an account that both expands and adds context to existing political theory that engages with emotion and helps to explain the limits of liberal and progressive political responses to Sri Lanka's past violence and more recent events like the Easter 2019 bombings and their aftermath. We trace the ways in which emotions of fear, love and hate are articulated and capitalized upon in mainstream political discourse in Sri Lanka in ways that both resonate with but are also distinct from accounts originating in the West.
In the second part of the chapter we seek to move beyond this dystopian view of politics and affect.