Sad and Laughable and Strange: At War with Just War

Date

2020

Authors

Hartnett, Liane
O'Driscoll, Cian

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Taylor & Francis Group

Abstract

Scholars interested in just war theory have paid insufficient attention to how the soldiers tasked to carry out its demands think about it. Reflecting on this gap between theory and experience, this essay asks: What do soldiers think about the idea of just war and the demands it places upon them? Focusing on war memoirs, we argue that while most soldiers ostensibly endorse the principles of just war theory, they are not averse to highlighting, its absurdity. To understand this and what it means, one needs only to think about what makes soldiers laugh. Building on the work of Albert Camus, we suggest soldiers’ laughter renders audible their lucid recognition of war's absurdity – an articulation of the gap between the idea of “just war” and their experience of waging it – and a candid appraisal of their role in it as sad and laughable and strange.

Description

Keywords

Just war, memoirs, laughter, absurd, Camus

Citation

Source

Global Society

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

License Rights

Restricted until

2099-12-31