Making Enemies: War(b)ordering in Norwegian Extreme Right Discourse
Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/27502Date
2022-06-15Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Andreasen, Søren MosgaardAbstract
This article examines discursive practices of (b)ordering in outputs
circulated by a formerly state-funded, extreme-right civil society
organization, the Human Rights Service (HRS). Focusing on how
an antagonistic relational structure is systematically encouraged
between “non-Western,” minoritized populations and Norwegian
majorities, I assess the fundamental components of a semiotics of
war. The study develops the concept of war(b)ordering to
describe how HRS systematically invites Norwegian majorities to
perceive minoritized populations as collective enemies through
three discursive frames: (a) citizen-soldier subjectivity, (b) a
narrative of secret invasion, and (c) visual differential
representation. Through a description of these frames underlying
HRS’s representations, the article argues that the Norwegian
state’s funding and mandating of this organization as an expert
actor that is authorized to provide the public with knowledge
about immigration and integration has conflicted with its human
rights obligation to prevent racial discrimination.
Publisher
RoutledgeCitation
Andreasen. Making Enemies: War(b)ordering in Norwegian Extreme Right Discourse. Journal of Borderlands Studies. 2022:1-20Metadata
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