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Lwilcox What the Body Means Millennium 2012

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    Lauren Wilcox1

    Millennium Conference on Materialism

    October 19-20, 2012

    Draft prepared for Conference Presentations, comments are welcome but please do not circulate

    or cite without permission from the author.

    What the Body Does: Theorizing Hunger Striking and Embodied Agency in International

    Relations

    For someone who is contented, or unconcerned with any worry, living what is termed an everyday life, youmay find my psychological circumstances hard to comprehend. For two reasons: firstly, my inability to

    describe the psychological struggle of myself and of my three hundred and fifty comrades; secondly, it is

    terribly hard, if not inconceivable, to conjure up in ones imagination the pain and stress of the

    psychological torture or to know its many forms or to understand its various effects.

    In short, imagine being entombed, naked and alone, for a whole day. What would it be like for twenty

    torturous months? Now again, with this in mind, try and imagine what it would be like to be in this

    situation in surroundings that resemble a pigsty, and you are crouched naked upon the floor in a corner,

    freezing cold, amid the lingering stench of putrefying rubbish, with crawling, wriggling white maggots all

    around you, fat bloated flies pestering your naked body, the silence is nerve-racking, your mind in turmoil.

    Consider being in that frame of mind every day! Knowing in your mind that you're to be beaten nearly

    senseless, forcibly bathed, or held down to have your back passage examined or probed. These things are

    common facts of everyday H-Block life.

    It is inconceivable to try to imagine what an eighteen-year-old naked lad goes through when a dozen or so

    screws slaughter him with batons, boots, and punches, while dragging him by the hair along a corridor, or

    when they squeeze his privates until he collapses, or throw scalding water around his naked body. It is also

    inconceivable for me to describe, let alone for you to imagine, our state of mind just waiting for this to

    happen. I can say that this physical and psychological torture h as brought many men to the verge of

    insanity (Sands 1982, 82-83).

    The relations of violence expressed by Bobby Sands in his account of life in the H-block

    leading up to the 1981 hunger strikes are vivid reminders of the entanglement of subjectivity and

    embodiment with violence, material objects and other bodies. International Relations has two

    main ways of thinking about agency, subjects and bodies. In the bulk of international relations

    theory, human bodies are not explicitly theorized. Rather, they are implicitly substances that

    encase subjects. They are only a location where consciousness is located, providing spatiality for

    1 Acknowledgments: Patrick Thaddeus Jackson, Renee Marlin-Bennett, Rose Shinko, Sam Chambers, Alex

    Livingston, audiences at Johns Hopkins and American University, Millennium.

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    the subject. Human bodies, in one sense, are the material form that makes agency possible, as

    they are a necessary precondition of the subjects interaction with the world. However, the body

    itself is seen as lifeless or passive, only given life and animated by consciousness. Bodies also

    pose a limit on human agency, in their ability to be harmed and killed. Wendts articulation of

    the body as analogous to the states territory in that it has an independent material existence and

    is not constituted by ideas or discourse is exemplary of the dualism that pervades IR theory in

    general. Alex Wendts constructivism is the primary example of this, not because he is alone

    (most of the broad perspectives of rationalism and constructivism falls in this category), but

    because he is more explicit about his assumptions than most theorists. Wendts articulation of the

    body as analogous to the states territory in that it has an independent material existence and is

    not constituted by ideas or discourse is exemplary of the dualism that pervades IR theory in

    general. Wendt explicitly relegates the human body as only a brute fact that exists outside of

    politics. Fearon and Wendt suggest that the internal structure of the body and its ability to move

    and act, serve as a platform on which actorhood is constructed (2002, 63). Fearon and Wendt

    write that while the meaning and social position of bodies varies, prior to the process of

    meaning-making, bodies must be structured by an internal organization in order to acquire

    meaning. For individuals, this is the bodys biological structure. For states, the collective action

    of biologically given people is shaped by the structure of the state (2002, 63). Embodied subjects

    exist prior to the process of identity formation and meaning-making in politics. In this

    framework, the capacities of bodies to weaken, show signs of pain and deterioration, and die

    could only be a barrier to political action, or something that could be calculated and used by

    conscious subjects. Bodies are formed before the social process of meaning-making, and cannot

    contribute themselves to this process. Here, the relevant question is what the body is.

    The positing of pre-existing agents with material characteristics prior to their formation in

    political practices has come under criticism by scholars affiliated with post-structural theorizing

    in International Relations precisely for this pre-political understanding of subjects as possessingcertain forms or characteristics prior to political processes (Zehfuss 2001, Doty 2000, Neumann,

    Uses of the Other: "The East" in European Identity Formation 1999, Epstein 2010). Inspired by

    theorists such as Gramsci, Althusser and Foucault, work associated with post-structuralism in IR

    takes the concept of discourse to be central to understanding the relationship between subjects,

    power and representational practices such as language. In Foucaults words, discourse analysis

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    consists of notof no longertreating discourses as groups of signs (signifying elements

    referring to contents or representations) but as practices that systematically form the objects of

    which they speak (Foucault, 1972, 49). Theorists associated with post-structuralism have

    insisted that they do not deny the existence of a material world, but rather there is no way to

    know that world outside of discourse, and that discourse is inherently material (Campbell 2000

    [1992]; Hansen 2006, 21-25). The fact that every object is constituted as an object of discourse

    has nothing to do with whether there is a world external to thought, or with the realism/idealism

    opposition . . . . What is denied is not that such objects exist externally to thought, but the rather

    different assertion that they could constitute themselves as objects outside of any discursive

    condition of emergence (Laclau and Mouffe 1985, 108). Discourses are productive of certain

    subject positions, of ways of being, knowing, and acting in the world. They are thus productive

    sites of social power because they define what is imaginable and possible in ordinary practices of

    life (Barnett and Duvall 2005). Our bodies are produced as objects in discourse. They are

    essentially cultural constructs, and thus have no agentic properties in themselves. Here, the

    primary question concerning bodies is what the body means.

    While this theory seeks to undermine the Cartesian dualism between culture and nature,

    mind and body by insisting upon the discursive (and thus contingent) foundations of objects and

    categories, this position reverses the causal attribution of agency: discourse constitutes agency.

    Even in sophisticated variants such as that of Hansen or Paul Edwards in which discourse

    contains more than speech acts to refer to the endure field of signifying or meaningful practices

    to consist of these social interactionsmaterial, institutional, and linguisticthrough which

    human knowledge is produced and reproduced (Edwards 1996, 34), suffer from this issue.

    Discourse still treaties material practices to be effects rather than causes, and a dualist ontology

    is preserved.2

    In invoking the performative capabilities of bodies to enact discourse, Lene Hansen

    writes, it is the question of the body which pushes the discursive approach most fully to its

    limits (Hansen 2000, 301). In this piece, I argue that the embodied practice of hunger-striking

    does indeed push the discursive approach to its limits. Rather than a fixed substance, or a product

    of social meanings, bodies should be understood as processes, as bodies-in-formation that

    2Footnote here about Chambers and the argument about discourse and bodies.

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    interact with multiple bodies and discourses to effect political transformation. Such a bodily

    ontology enables a posthumanist theory of agency, which I argue is necessary to theorize the

    agentic capacities of the hunger striker. In recent years, some feminists and political theorists

    have sought to reassess the relationship between the cultural and natural, mind and body, by

    overcoming not only discourses of biological determinism, but what they see is excessive weight

    granted to the cultural or linguistic in previous work in feminist and political theory in theorizing

    the embodied subject. Such theories are collected under headings of new materialisms or

    material feminisms. These theories are important in their attempts to formulate a space of agency

    for bodies and materiality more broadly, without falling into either trap of biological

    determinism or the idealism of post-structuralism in which bodies are produced by language or

    discourses all the way down. A key argument of this emerging movement is that nature

    punches back in ways that humans and their technologies cannot predict (Alaimo and Hekman

    2008, 7). Materiality is re-theorized not as a limit to, or foundation for, cultural inscription, but

    as agentic in such a way that it cannot be ontologically separated from cultural or discursive

    forces. The category of nature is not what halts or forms a barrier to human liberation, but can

    introduce dynamism into the human world in unpredictable ways. As two leading proponents

    insist, For materiality is always something more than mere matter: an excess, force, vitality,

    relationality or difference that renders matter active, self-creative, productive, unpredictable

    (Coole and Frost 2010, 9).

    The practice of hunger striking gives us an opening to think about bodies as having a

    capacity to push back against their inscription and formation in discursive practices. In other

    words, human bodies can beproductive as well asproduced. Such a perspective would also not

    defining subjects or bodies as a priori individuals; rather, individualism is only one possibility

    for understanding the subject. A post-humanist perspective of agency would entail a plane of

    immanence in which not only are nature/culture, materialism/idealism, mind and body given the

    same status, but these very distinctions do not exist. This entails a rejects of both vulgarmaterialism and most variants of the discourse approach, even most of the practice turn

    (Pouliot 2008, Adler and Pouliot 2011). Posthumanist agency also requires a foregrounding of

    relations rather than either subjects or objects (Jackson and Nexon 1999). Third, a posthuman

    conception of agency requires an ontology of movement, complexity and assemblage. Rather

    than incorporating an ontology of substance, or viewing bodies as a repository of meanings,

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    theorizing bodies as agentic in their relations with other bodies requires a method for thinking

    bodies and embodiment as processes and means, rather than looking at bodies, turning ones

    attention to processes that form bodies in assemblages. Assemblages are made of parts that work

    together, that have no meaningful existence outside of the relations.

    My argument in this piece is twofold: one, human bodies possess agentic capacities in

    that they can they can produce political affects in reassembling assemblages and second, that

    these agentic capacities exist insofar as bodies are components of broader assemblages. Bodies

    are assemblages, but they are also parts of assemblages. In an assemblage, every element has a

    vital force, but this is not a solid block, but a collective, so that the parts have their own

    inflectionthey are not subsumed by the assemblage. Components of assemblages have no

    independent function or meaning, but only work to produce effects as joined in assemblages.

    Rather, elements from within can disrupt it. Assemblages are not solid or stable, but are

    generative, in the process of combining and recombining functions, removing elements and

    functions and bring out new ones. Here, I refer both to human bodies as assemblages, and to

    bodies as elements or components in another assemblage, which for ease of reference I call the

    prison assemblage.

    Posthumanistperformativity is a term Barad uses to restore agency to materiality, but

    not as a force existing outside of the productive powers of discourse: neither materiality nor

    discourse is given causal efficacy on its own as in dualist ontologies. Specifically, she describes

    how the materiality of bodies comes to play an active role in the discursive production of bodies,

    rather than a basis for the passive inscription of social forces. Barad posits an account of

    phenomena as the basic epistemological unit that is not individual but relational: phenomena are

    relata, part of relations that do not precede these relations. These phenomena are constitutive of

    reality, as reality is not composed of things-in-themselves or things behind phenomena but

    things-in-phenomena (2003, 817). Barads work is influenced by her reading of quantum

    physics, but it shares much with Deluezian concepts of assemblages.

    Agency, according to new materialist approaches, is a distributed phenomenon, meaning

    that it emerges from interactions between bodies (and can include both human and non-human

    bodies) (see (Krause 2011, Barad 2003). Bodies undergo change when they act upon or are acted

    upon by other bodies. In terms of affect, bodies may be thought of as what they are capable of

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    doing. Bodies have more power in relation to other bodies. This kind of metamorphosis in the

    powers of a given body or assemblage is what Deleuze and Guattari call becoming. (Deleuze

    and Guattari 1987, 54)3

    Objects in assemblages have agency in that they produce effectsagain,

    the material or discursive nature of such effects is not a relevant distinction. Causality is complex

    and emergentneither objects nor structure pre-exist, but are the result of complex interactions.

    Bodies and assemblages are always becoming rather is, becoming something other than they

    werein motion rather than static. The agentic capacities of bodies, or their involvement in

    practices of resistance do not take the form of dichotomous opposition or a great refusal but

    rather, lie in their capacity to form new connections and assemblages with other bodies.

    To theorize the body of the hunger striker as an agentic component in a broader

    assemblage, I start with the prison. Much has been written about the prison as a coercive and

    disciplining institution, most famously of course by Foucault, who considered what people

    thought about prison design as an exemplary moment of disciplinary politics. I begin with the

    prison precisely because it is an extreme example of bodily coercion, violence, and isolation as

    such, it presents us with something of a hard case for seeing the agentic capacities of bodies in

    formation with one another. The material structure of prison does not only consist of walls and

    bars, but the showers, the bodies of guards, the food, the blankets, the uniforms, the bodies of

    prisoners, and their letters, smuggled in and out. Prisons are not isolated units either, but are parts

    of broader assemblages including (but not limited to): a history of English colonialism and Irish

    nationalism, the families and comrades of the prisoners, and the meaning of hunger strike. In the

    case of Guantnamo, the prison is part of an assemblage of the war on terror, the whole prison

    complex, the legal justifications, and the sedimented history of the hunger strike, the meaning of

    terrorist and Islam.

    The prison is also the site of torture, in which the states power is produced through the

    harming and injuring of bodies. Sands writing quoted above tells of the implements of torture as

    other critical bodies in this assemblage, such as the showers and brushes which formed part of

    the collection of elements that become part of the assemblage. Torture and abuse are well-

    documented parts of the prison experience for hunger strikers in the examples I have mentioned;

    3For clarity, although Deleuze and Guattari refer to bodies in a broad sense as things in existence in relation to

    others, Im referring to components in an assemblage and keeping bodies to mean human bodiessince my point

    here is twofold: bodies have agency, as components of broader assemblage.

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    Irish Republicans, prisoners in Guantanamo Bay, and those affiliated with the PKK in Turkey.

    Torture has the effect of producing certain subjects, or rather, non-subjects reduced to bare or

    biopolitical life. Torture marks the body not only through injury, but by performatively making

    the body of the torture victim into a subject that can be tortured, or as Judith Butler writes, one

    locates injurability with the other by injuring the other and then taking the sign of injury as the

    truth of the other (Butler 2009, 178). Torture is a technique that acts in and through bodies to

    constitute certain political subjectivities and relations. These relations that are constituted

    through torture make the body of the prisoner into a key battlefield. As Feldman writes of the

    British torture of Irish Republican paramilitary prisoners, the performance of torture does not

    apply power; rather it manufactures it from the raw ingredient of the captives body. The

    surface of the body is the stage where the state is made to appear as an effective material force

    (Feldman 1991, 115). The bodies of prisoners are thus produced in relation to a state power and

    the bodies of their torturers in the prison. Bodies of prisons become part of an assemblage in the

    prison aimed at making prisoners into docile subjects and furthering the states aims in

    maintaining rule in N. Ireland.

    The hunger strike as a form of prison protest is a site in which bodily agency as part of

    bodily assemblages becomes visible. The hunger strikes of imprisoned Irish Republican

    Nationalists in the early 1980s (led by Bobby Sands) are some of the most well known. In this

    context, hunger striking has a long history in both Irish Nationalist politics and is legitimated by

    references to Irish tradition, in which sitting on the front steps of someone who has aggrieved

    you and refusing to eat has a historical basis within the culture. In this sense, the practice of

    hunger striking can be compared to self-immolation or suicide bombing as a kind of

    performative witnessing (Roberts 2007) in which causing harm or death to yourself is a

    particularly powerful way of making a statement that your cause is just. Indeed, hunger strikes

    have been used by organizations that also deploy suicide bombers, such as the LTTE in Sri

    Lanka, and the PKK in Turkey. Hunger strikes by members of Irish Republican nationalists,political prisoners affiliated with the PKK and prisoners in Guantanamo Bay were all designed as

    a protest against prison conditions that had to do with how bodies were controlled and made into

    certain symbolic options. Not all hunger strikes take place in prisons or as a protest of prison

    conditions, of course. I focus on the hunger strike as a form of prison protest in order to

    demonstrate one site in which the politics of bodies is especially evident; the examples I refer to

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    are relevant not only to international politics, but because they are examples of a phenomenon

    that allow us to ask questions about the functioning of bodies in international politics. In

    beginning not with the hunger strike, but with the prison, I also seek to take seriously the dual

    nature of materialism: The political appeal to materialism is always twofold: we must both

    recognize how bodily life has unfolded historically to produce certain relations, and we must

    acknowledge that freedom from those relations requires recognition of our materiality

    (Colebrook 2008, 63). The prison setting highlights the exteriority of bodies; while the story of

    hunger striking can be told as a story of the bodys rebellion and refusal, the prison is a dramatic

    example of the body as a site of coercion, victimization and inscription.

    The hunger strike and other bodily practices such as the Dirty Protest reveal the body

    not only as locus of the states power, but also as an agentic source of resistance. At issue is not

    the prisonper se but the question of the possibilities of transformation in relation to the ways in

    which contemporary regimes of power control, shape, mold, invest and inscribe bodies. At stake

    in Foucaults words, all these movementshave been about the body and material thingsthey

    were revolts, at the level of the body, against the very body of the prison. What was at issue was

    not whether the prison environment was too harsh or too aseptic, too primitive or too efficient,

    but its very materiality as an instrument and vector of power (Foucault 1979, 30). Following

    Foucaults logic, it becomes clear in the enclosed world of the prison has implications for the

    study of power, agency and embodied more broadly in International Relations. The body takes

    on meaning, and a range of possibilities for action, in the process of forming assemblages.

    Theorizing the agentic capacities (Coole 2005) of bodies moves us from the enclosed, modular

    view of the prison as a set of material practices of coercion and disciplining to a view of bodies

    and agency more attuned complex nature of power in the contemporary world of multiple and

    overlapping flows of power rather than fixed, stable institutions.

    We can view torture in the prison as an attempt to mold and shape the bodies of

    prisoners, making them into docile, individualized subjects that are thoroughly subjected in the

    sense of dominated by sovereign power. Torture is a continuation of prison as a practice to write

    the bodies of prisoners through and through with the power of the regime and deny its victims a

    subjectivity outside that of the regimes will. Thus far, however, we have not departed from what

    discourse theory in International Relations theorizing about our bodies: they are given meaning

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    through discursive practices, they are inscribed by power, and it is through discursive formation

    that we know bodies. We can begin to transcend this view that fails to delineate an active or

    agentic role to the materiality of bodies themselves by thinking about how bodies play an active

    role in producing political effects and can usher in a transformation in the prison assemblage.

    Hunger striking involves a decision by a subject to refuse food. That human emotion and

    cognition is involved does not mean that bodies as/and assemblages cannot be agentic, for as

    Coole argues, the operations of agentic capacities in politics will always exceed the agency

    exercise by rational subjects (Coole 2005). Here, some may object that the body here is no more

    than a tool to be used, and that we need not depart from the Cartesian view of the body as

    mechanistic, or passive material to be manipulated by active subjects in order to theorize the

    body of the hunger striker. However, this view is inadequate for a number of reasons. First,

    human subjectivity cannot be separated from experiences of the body. Contemporary

    neuroscience and cognitive science theorizes the mind as a category not only of the brain, but

    as always situated in a body (Varela, Thompson and Rosch 1991). We experience emotions or

    sensations as a result of our bodys attempts to maintain equilibrium (Damasio 1999). For

    example, the experience of hunger is a felt experience that is a result of a drop in blood sugar,

    which is detected by neurons in the brain, which activate a bodily statethe sensation of hunger.

    This is what is known as a molar view of the body, in which the body is made up of organs, of

    which the brain is only one. If we were to follow this line of reasoning instead of the

    instrumental view of hunger striking (that the actions of hunger strikers are driven, at least after

    the initial decision to undertake a hunger strike, by the biochemical processes in the body), we

    would subvert a dynamic sense of embodied agency as a process. While theorizing the hunger

    strike from an instrumental perspective reinforces a view of the body as substance that subjects

    manipulate, a biochemical view of embodied give us only a partial understanding of bodily

    experiences by reducing them to interactions within a singular body.

    The lived body is always, in Iris Marion Youngs terms, enculturated (Young 2002).

    Ones bodily experience is not separate from the social and political context in which one lives.

    The experience of prison life contributes to ones cognitive and emotional stateas Sands

    struggles to communicate in the prelude to article. The subjects cognition is only one part of his

    or her bodily assemblage, as bodies are written upon, produced by, social and political forces as

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    well. This is the contribution of Foucault, Butler, and others who theorize the formation of

    subjects through subjection to power that works on and through the body. The body is enacted

    materially through its interactions in the environment. Living in spaces and participating in their

    organization forms the body in characteristic ways, which in turn provides a matrix of

    permutations for thought and action (Hayles 1999, 203).

    Bodies are lively, self-organizing assemblages. They are assemblages because they are

    not closed entities, but are dependent upon its openness and connectedness for survival and for

    imagining its place in the world as a subject. Food, water and air are environmental elements

    crucial for the survival of bodies, while clothes and shelter are needed other environmental

    elements that provide protection from other elements (such as the weather). The existence and

    agency of bodies depends upon the interaction and cooperation of bodies and other elements and

    forces (see also Bennett 2010, 21). They are assemblages, as they are not closed entities and rely.

    The body as assemblage is not a stable configuration of forces, as processes of growth and aging

    make plain. The same foods that nourish one in ones youth may cause weight gain as one ages,

    for example. The body as a self-organizing assemblage is, however, not completely openthere

    must be some kind of boundary membrane between bodies and the outside milieu. This is

    necessary for oneself to experience life as a body, to experience bodily sensations and feelings.

    The self-organization of bodies revolves around this principle (Colebrook 2011, Damasio, 1994).

    Bodies as assemblages (in Deleuze and Guattaris terms, as bodies-without-organs) are

    not bounded in a given territory, they do not end at the skin. They only exist in their relations

    with other bodies, human and non-human. What bodies do, in hunger striking, I want to suggest,

    is not only act in the only way possible, out of desperation which is a way of describing a

    rational, or at least, cognitive actor using his or her body as a tool. Such an explanation is

    inconsistent The agentic role of bodies, in acting on other bodies and disrupting the prison

    assemblage is, in combination with cognition and a broader media landscapeof entering into

    new relationships by their capacities to weaken and die. Bodies enact and reassemble

    assemblages.

    The hunger strike took place after a blanket protest in which prisoners refused to wear the

    prison uniform that would visually label them criminals rather than political prisoners. The

    protest intensified into a dirty protest involving a refusal to wash and the smearing of

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    excrement on cell walls, as reaction against abuse related to meals and bathroom shower trips

    such as inedible food, beatings, and invasive bodily inspections. The bodys need for food and its

    processes of elimination played a key role in the struggle for control over bodies and to control

    the meaning of bodies. These components of the human-body-as-assemblage entail both the

    means of abuse and the means of resisting this abuse. The hunger strike involves a subject

    refusing her or her bodys needs for food. Food is taken out of the assemblage of the body. In

    doing so, a disruption is caused in the body assemblage, and in the broader prison assemblage.

    The hunger striker refuses food, denying the body some of the material supplementation it needs

    to exist. The body of the hunger striker, in turn, acts by weakening, feeding on its own tissues,

    causing a great deal of pain and eventual death. The vulnerability of bodies is a necessary

    condition for the agentic effects of hunger striking. As such, the body of the hunger striker enters

    into politics on terms that refuse to occupy the docile subject position of inmate. Because

    assemblages are not stable but defined by movement, vitality, and even life in their combining,

    rearranging and discarding, the death of the body assemblage of the prisoner is a denial of a

    crucial component of the prison assemblage: a body to act upon.

    The transformation of the prison assemblage through hunger striking comes in no small

    part through the manipulation of time. Body assemblages have their own time in the lifespan of

    human beings, in which bodies strive toward equilibrium but which is affected by outside forces

    and choices by subjects as well as eventual weakening and death. The prison assemblage works

    on bodies to create a sense of urgency for those who could not be docile bodies out of a sense of

    desperation at the tactics deployed by the prison assemblage. For example, those involved in the

    Dirty Protest and blanket strikes that preceded the hunger strikes in Northern Ireland prisons in

    1981 reported a sense that, after five years of various forms of prison protest, there was an

    increasingly feeling that something had to be done to break the stalemate (Feldman 1991, 249).

    A similar dynamic is reported from Guantanamo Bay detainees over not knowing how long they

    would be detained and when, if ever, they would be released. Hunger striking prisoners inGuantanamo Bay demanded to be set free or put on trial; in short, to end their legal limbo

    (Worthington 2007, 271-276; Stafford Smith 2007, 189). Shaker Aamen, a spokesman for the

    prisoners, wrote on the verge of a renewed hunger strike, I am dying here every day. Mentally

    and physically, this is happening to all of us. We have been ignored, locked up in the middle of

    the ocean for four years. Rather than humiliate myself, having to beg for water here in Camp

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    Echo, I have decided to hurry up a process that is going to happen anyway (Stafford Smith

    2007, 207). The prison assemblage is relatively static assemblage, moving toward fixity and

    closurewhile bodily assemblages are relatively open.

    The temporality of the hunger strike differs from similar practices of self-harm as

    political tactic such as self-immolation or suicide bombing. By undertaking a hunger strike, one

    is open to negotiation, or the possibility of coming off the hunger strike if certain conditions are

    met. The hunger strike prolongs the time to death of the suicide, but it condenses the time of the

    regular life span of the body. As such, hunger striking makes a weapon out of life as a

    naturalized process (see also Bargu 2011). The practice of hunger striking fus[es] the subject

    and object of violent enactment into a single body (Feldman 1991, 264). The practice of hunger

    striking is a means of resisting the control over the body and its performance of political relations

    by shifting the orientation of violence in the prison assemblage. The body of the hunger-striker

    enacts the progression of the body toward death in a reduced time, amplifying the effects of the

    bodys inevitable decline toward death. As such, the self-destructing bodies force a certain crisis

    to take place. Death is inevitable if the strike continues, but it is also unpredictable, as it is based

    in an internal logic of body assemblages that is not necessarily accessible to human subjects.,

    sometimes including the will to live. Whether action is taken to acquiesce to demands, if the

    demands are ignored, if the hunger strikers are force-fed, or if some other intervention takes

    places, new relations are forged and the shape and movement of the assemblages shifts. The

    becoming-(dead)bodies of hunger strikers transform the relations of power in the prison by

    reassembling elements in cross-cutting assemblage.

    Hunger striking relies upon yet other elements in an assemblage: the audience whose

    attention is drawn to prison conditions via the hunger strike. Here, the assemblage extends

    spatially beyond the architecture of the prison. When Bobby Sands and others went on a hunger

    strike to demand classification of IRA members as political prisoners, rather than criminals, the

    Thatcher government decided not to intervene and allowed them to die. Rather than

    acknowledging their actions as a political protest, Thatcher declared the prisoners had

    committed suicide. The hunger strikers who died were celebrated as martyrs and their funeral

    parades attended by a hundred thousand, and Bobby Sands was elected as an MP during the

    hunger strike. Most of the demands of the prisoners were eventually met. The hunger strikes

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    served to radicalize the population and led to the success of Sinn Fein in electoral politics. The

    British won the battle of the bowels but lost the war for the hearts and minds (Coogan 1997

    (1980), 261). The prison was politicized from a site of punishment for crimes and surveillance, to

    a site of struggle that echoed broadly through the assemblage.

    One case of a hunger striker who was taken off the strike illustrates how bodies can exert

    a kind of agency even against the speech-acts of subjects. Turkish hunger striker Fatma Sener is

    quoted by journalist Scott Anderson defending her choice to undertake a death fast: I dont want

    to quit life, I want to live very much, but I also came to see that I had to make a stand for what I

    believed in, to fight for the kind of life that I want to live (Anderson 2001). Seners body in its

    weakness and deterioration has ambiguous effects. Described as an extraordinarily beautiful

    woman, with an infectious smile and penetrating brown eyes by Anderson, Seners frail

    embodiment leads him to intervene and work with her family to take her off the hunger strike.

    Would he have done this if not for her embodiment as a woman and moreover, her attractive

    appearance and affect: serene, ethereal with the aura of an angel? Anderson paints Sener as

    a misguided teenager, a damsel in distress who needs to be under the guidance and care of her

    family. As she grew increasingly weak and close to death, Anderson frantically communicates

    with both the Turkish official in charge of the prisons and Seners family to convince Sener that

    her hunger strike was pointless and the demands would not be met. Despite Seners political

    commitments, it seems evident that her feminine, dying body acted upon Anderson, causing him

    to intervene to apply pressure to Sener and her family to get her to stop her hunger strike. Seners

    body acted against her conscious mind, and acted upon Anderson to become its ally in ending

    Sener-the-intentional-subjects hunger strike. And yet, this kind of agency is not possible outside

    of a particular discursive structure of gender and heteronormativity: Seners body acted in

    concert with certain gender norms and Anderson as the repository of such norms to end Seners

    hunger strike.

    In the case of Binyam Mohammad, Shaker Aamen and the other hunger strikers at

    Guantnamo Bay the main effect of the hunger strikes was to force their jailers into a kind of

    recognition or apprehension of them. The US was, in essence, forced to care for them. To be

    sure, this care took the form of painful force-feedings against the will of the hunger strikers.

    However, by force-feeding the prisoners, the prisoners were discursively produced as

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    dependents, as psych patients as only those considered unable to make decision on their own

    behalf such as those in mental institutions have historically been force-fed. Of one prisoner,

    naval surgeon Louis Louk said, Hes refused to eat 148 consecutive meals. In my opinion, hes

    a spoiled brat, like a small child who stomps his feet when he doesnt get his way (Stafford

    Smith 2007, 189). A Pentagon spokesperson has responded to charges of ill-treatment in force-

    feeding by saying that Defense Department officials believe that preservation of life through

    lawful, clinically appropriate means is a responsible and prudent measure for the safety and well-

    being of detainees (White 2006). While this subject position as dependent is far from the

    status as rights bearing subject that the hunger strikers sought, this instance does show that the

    starving body can be disruptive enough to cause a change in the political relations between jailer

    and prisoner. In this case, we could say that the prisoners (as already assemblages) and the jailers

    (likewise assemblages) were transformed because of the transformation of their relations with the

    broader prisoner and war on terror assemblage. Furthermore, the body is also acting against the

    conscious wishes of the hunger strikers in absorbing the nutrients from the force-feeding. The

    bodys nutrient absorption energies are used by the state to overpower the conscious subject, but

    not without a shift in the discourse surrounding the prisoners. We cant call hunger striking in

    this circumstance an act of pure freedom, or an uncomplicated victory for one side or the other,

    we can, I think, say that this causes a kind of shift and disturbance, bringing in new objects and

    discourses the feeding tubes, the chairs, the protests of doctors representing medical ethics,

    discourses to the overall assemblages, trying to incorporate them into the assemblage.

    The hunger striker demonstrates that subjectivities cannot be reduced to discursive

    phenomenon but are also constituted by bodily affects. In short, bodily experiences may be

    shaped by language or discursive formations, but bodily experiences also wield a force that

    shapes linguistic and other choices in a recursive process. In the figure of the hunger striker,

    matter has a history, an agentic capacity of its own. It is not entirely written. Rather, it enters into

    relationshipswith meaning, with other bodies, with objects and structures. By weakening anddying, or threatening to, the body assemblage works on the broader prison/state/media

    assemblage to acquire a new meaning, and to perhaps change the function of the prison

    assemblage or apparatus. Subjects become subjects by taking possession of the means of bodily

    violence, even if this is intended to, or even just risks, bring about the demise of the subject.

    Hunger-striking can be read as a re-appropriation of the mechanisms of power that seek to

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    dominate, shape and mold bodies. It is thus not a pure form of resistance to power, but a form of

    power itself (Foucault 1978, 101). The political act of the hunger strike is enabled by the human

    body in a way that exceeds frameworks of agency that posits the human body as a platform for

    human agency, or of bodies that are only knowable through discourse. The agentic properties

    that enable the hunger strike to work as a political protest have to do with the obvious, yet

    undertheorized, aspect of embodied subjectivity: the unpredictable yet inevitable weakening and

    death of the body.

    The reading of bodies in pain as communication in non-representational terms and as a

    call for recognition, can be thought of as exposing, and contributing to, a particular relationality

    in the acknowledgement of the realities of pain and the mutual constitution of subjectivity as

    embodied in particular context that includes other embodied subjects as well. Hunger striking is,

    at one level an individual act, but it is an act that produces new bodies and new assemblages.

    Guantnamo Bay prisoners and hunger striker Binyam Mohammad declared, I do not intended

    to stop until I die or we are respected suggests that it is an I who embarks on a hunger strike, but

    a we that is to be brought into being, recognized as a political entity with certain rights. This

    statement suggests the practice of hunger striking is a performative practice conjuring a

    multiplicity of bodies in the action of a singular body. Furthermore, this we depends on a

    certain audience that is addressed, whose attention is drawn to the prison by the wasting body of

    the hunger striker. Veena Das argues that the expression of pain is a call for recognition in the

    body of the other. The experience of pain cries out for the response of the possibility that pain

    could be reversed, that it could reside in your body instead of mine in a kind of remembrance or

    imagining (Das 2007). The pain materialized in the body of the hunger striker acts through the

    body to form connections with other bodies. As Asad reminds us, What a subject experiences as

    painful, and how, are not simply mediated culturally and physically, they are themselves modes

    of living in a relationship (Asad 2003, 84). Bodily pain is a way of possibly entering into a

    relationshipbut what relationship depends upon the response to pain, how it is allowed to beexpressed. Asad gives us a way of thinking about how we can differently establish relations and

    rethink connectionsthrough attention to the material body in its social and political relations.

    The subject of torture/hunger striking in this way is not an autonomous subject trapped in his or

    her own body but bound in relations of recognition with fellow prisoners, prison guards/doctors,

    and a broader audience beyond the prison. The practice of hunger striking transforms the

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    violence that produces the vulnerability and criminality of the prisoner into a form of sacrifice

    with different performative effects; making the bodies of hunger strikers into more fully political

    actors with different relationships to their jailors and the broader community.

    Conclusion:

    Theorizing bodies as assemblages with agentic capacities is not only to broader questions

    about agency, subjectivity and discourse. A methodological focus on practices of bodies and

    embodiment has much to offer IR, which as a discipline is just beginning to think about the ways

    that human bodies are relevant in the formation of subjects in international relations. Readers of

    Foucault are well aware of the states investment in not only disciplining individual bodies but in

    managing the states population in terms of movement and migration, health, longevity and

    reproduction by marshalling apparently natural forces. Of particular note are theorists who

    have used Agambens concept of bare life to denote subjects who are produced as just bodies,

    who live on the terms of animal or biological life rather than as political subjects in such

    examples as the indefinite detention camps Guantnamo Bay, Bagram Air Force base and

    elsewhere, internally displaced persons and refugee camps, occupied lands, detention centers for

    asylum seekers or who become collateral damage. (Enns 2004; Seshadri 2008; Tagma 2009). If

    practices of sovereign power routinely take the form of the biopolitical investment in the life-

    processes of certain bodiesto make live while demarcating and producing other bodies as

    those who must die, and if biopower comes to characterize the functioning of power globally in

    terms of a generalized instrumentalization of human existence and the material destruction of

    human bodies and populations (Mbembe 2003, 13) see also (Dillon and Reid 2009; Reid 2006;

    Dauphinee and Masters 2007) it falls to us to take seriously not only the power that forms bodies

    either constituted as bare life or as unlivable lives (Butler 2004) but the terms of bodily

    existence which resist, which strike back and that are not entirely written or determined by

    power.

    Besides hunger striking, various forms of protest have explicitly involved self-harm, from

    the self-immolation of Mohamed Bouazizi that sparked a chain of events that become known as

    the Arab Spring, to asylum seekers in Australia who have sewn their lips shut in protest of their

    living conditions and uncertain political status. The practice of suicide bombing can also fall

    under this category, along with what might be considered more mundane, everyday bodily

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    practices. Given the importance that IR theorists have given to thinking about the way that power

    shapes the political meanings given to certain bodies, as well as the ways in which how certain

    ways of theorizing bodies give rise to certain forms of politics, IR would do well to consider the

    implications of a more robust, vibrant and deeply political understanding of bodies as both

    constituted by, yet in excess to themselves, constituting our world in their relations with one

    another.

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