ABSTRACT

The notion of ‘silence’ in Politics and International Relations has come to imply the absence of voice in political life and, as such, tends to be scholastically prescribed as the antithesis of political power and political agency. However, from Emma Gonzáles’s three minutes of silence as part of her address at the March for Our Lives, to Trump’s attempts to silence the investigation into his campaign’s alleged collusion with Russia, along with the continuing revelations articulated by silence-breakers of sexual harassment, it is apparent that there are multiple meanings and functions of political silence – all of which intersect at the nexus of power and agency.

Dingli and Cooke present a complex constellation of engagements that challenge the conceptual limitations of established approaches to silence by engaging with diverse, cross-disciplinary analytical perspectives on silence and its political implications in the realms of: environmental politics, diplomacy, digital privacy, radical politics, the politics of piety, commemoration, international organization and international law, among others. Contributors to this edited collection chart their approaches to the relationship between silence, power and agency, thus positing silence as a productive modality of agency.

While this collection promotes intellectual and interdisciplinary synergy around critical thinking and research regarding the intersections of silence, power and agency, it is written for scholars in politics, international relations theory, international political theory, critical theory and everything in between.

chapter 1|21 pages

Noise, data, silence, privacy

chapter 2|21 pages

The global politics of silence and sound

From metaphor to metonymy

chapter 3|16 pages

Silence, exit and the politics of piety

Challenging logocentrism in political theory

chapter 4|18 pages

Silence is golden

Commemorating the past in two minutes

chapter 5|16 pages

Silence as doing

chapter 6|17 pages

A deliberate silence

The politics of aural materialism

chapter 7|17 pages

Agency without voice?

A political ecology of vegetal silence

chapter 8|16 pages

Silence as relation in music

Two political applications in early modern times

chapter 9|17 pages

Transgressive silence

Ecology, religion and the power of humility in the practice of diplomacy

chapter 10|16 pages

Residual silences

Toward a radical activist politics of association