Diplomacy beyond history: analytic-violence, producer-centred research, India
The history of Indian diplomacy conceptualises diplomacy racially—as invented by the West—and restrictively—to offence. This is ‘analytic-violence’ and it explains the berating of Indians for mimicking diplomacy incorrectly or unthinkingly, and the deleting, dismissing, or denigrating, of diplomatic...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1694882023-07-31T02:13:35Z Diplomacy beyond history: analytic-violence, producer-centred research, India Datta-Ray, Deep K. S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Social sciences::Political science International Relations Pakistan Terror Diplomacy The history of Indian diplomacy conceptualises diplomacy racially—as invented by the West—and restrictively—to offence. This is ‘analytic-violence’ and it explains the berating of Indians for mimicking diplomacy incorrectly or unthinkingly, and the deleting, dismissing, or denigrating, of diplomatic practices contradicting history’s conception. To relieve history from these offences, a new method is presented, ‘Producer-Centred Research’ (PCR). Initiating with abduction, an insight into a problem—in this case Indian diplomacy’s compromised historicisation—PCR solves it by converting history’s racist rationality into ‘rationalities’. The plurality renders rationality one of many, permitting PCR’s searching for rationalities not as a function of rationality but robust practices explicable in producer’s terms. Doing so is exegesis. It reveals India’s nuclear diplomacy as unique, for being organised by defence, not offence. Moreover, offence’s premise of security as exceeding opponent’s hostility renders it chimerical for such a security is, paradoxically, reliant on expanding arsenals. Additionally, doing so is a response to opponents. This fragments sovereignty and abdicates control for one is dependent on opponent’s choices. Defence, however, does not instigate opponents and so really delivers security by minimising arsenals since offence is eschewed. Doing so is not a response to opponents and so maintains sovereignty and retains control by denying others the right to offense. The cost of defence is courage, for instance, choosing to live in the shadow of nuclear annihilation. Exegesis discloses Balakot as a shift from defence to offence, so to relieve the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) leadership of having to be courageous. The intensity of the intention to discard courage is apparent in the price the BJP paid. This included equating India with Pakistan, permitting it to escalate the conflict, and so imperiling all humanity in a manner beyond history. 2023-07-31T02:13:35Z 2023-07-31T02:13:35Z 2021 Journal Article Datta-Ray, D. K. (2021). Diplomacy beyond history: analytic-violence, producer-centred research, India. India Quarterly, 77(1), 9-24. https://dx.doi.org/10.1177/0974928420983074 0974-9284 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/169488 10.1177/0974928420983074 1 77 9 24 en India Quarterly © 2021 Indian Council of World Affairs (ICWA). All rights reserved. |
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Social sciences::Political science International Relations Pakistan Terror Diplomacy Datta-Ray, Deep K. Diplomacy beyond history: analytic-violence, producer-centred research, India |
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The history of Indian diplomacy conceptualises diplomacy racially—as invented by the West—and restrictively—to offence. This is ‘analytic-violence’ and it explains the berating of Indians for mimicking diplomacy incorrectly or unthinkingly, and the deleting, dismissing, or denigrating, of diplomatic practices contradicting history’s conception. To relieve history from these offences, a new method is presented, ‘Producer-Centred Research’ (PCR). Initiating with abduction, an insight into a problem—in this case Indian diplomacy’s compromised historicisation—PCR solves it by converting history’s racist rationality into ‘rationalities’. The plurality renders rationality one of many, permitting PCR’s searching for rationalities not as a function of rationality but robust practices explicable in producer’s terms. Doing so is exegesis. It reveals India’s nuclear diplomacy as unique, for being organised by defence, not offence. Moreover, offence’s premise of security as exceeding opponent’s hostility renders it chimerical for such a security is, paradoxically, reliant on expanding arsenals. Additionally, doing so is a response to opponents. This fragments sovereignty and abdicates control for one is dependent on opponent’s choices. Defence, however, does not instigate opponents and so really delivers security by minimising arsenals since offence is eschewed. Doing so is not a response to opponents and so maintains sovereignty and retains control by denying others the right to offense. The cost of defence is courage, for instance, choosing to live in the shadow of nuclear annihilation. Exegesis discloses Balakot as a shift from defence to offence, so to relieve the Bharatiya Janata Party’s (BJP) leadership of having to be courageous. The intensity of the intention to discard courage is apparent in the price the BJP paid. This included equating India with Pakistan, permitting it to escalate the conflict, and so imperiling all humanity in a manner beyond history. |
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S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies |
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S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Datta-Ray, Deep K. |
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Article |
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Datta-Ray, Deep K. |
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Datta-Ray, Deep K. |
title |
Diplomacy beyond history: analytic-violence, producer-centred research, India |
title_short |
Diplomacy beyond history: analytic-violence, producer-centred research, India |
title_full |
Diplomacy beyond history: analytic-violence, producer-centred research, India |
title_fullStr |
Diplomacy beyond history: analytic-violence, producer-centred research, India |
title_full_unstemmed |
Diplomacy beyond history: analytic-violence, producer-centred research, India |
title_sort |
diplomacy beyond history: analytic-violence, producer-centred research, india |
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2023 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/169488 |
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1773551368321105920 |