Armed conflicts and collective identities: a discursive investigation of lay and political accounts of the wars in Iraq and Lebanon
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Date
29/06/2011Author
Al-Ali, Talal
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Abstract
This thesis investigates how and why various Iraqi and Lebanese politicians and
laypeople account for the armed conflicts, which they have been living through, and
the involved sides of these conflicts. In both of these countries people have been
exposed to major international and civil wars. Both nations are also cosmopolitan
societies that contain multiple ethnic, racial, and religious groups, which make the
issue of identity of great importance.
How wars should be examined is a subject of much debate within
psychology. On the one hand, the majority of psychological studies of war rest upon
the assumption that war is primarily a destructive experience. Thus, the focus has
been traditionally on investigating lasting psychopathological effects of war. A Large
number of previous studies have reported that a significant segment of people who
were exposed to the experience of war developed psychological problems, especially
post traumatic stress disorder. On the other hand, a growing number of psychology
researchers contend that most people maintain their psychological equilibrium in the
face of almost all types of traumatic experiences, including war-related affairs. These
researchers have shifted the focus toward examining and explaining this finding.
Within this vigorous debate, limited attention has been paid to the question of how
and why people account for their experiences as well as the various aspects of war in
their own words. Currently, a limited number of studies indicate that people can and
do present the same war in significantly different ways, as a means to attain certain
ends.
Furthermore, a significant body of research suggests that people’s collective
identities play an important role in relation to their understandings, descriptions,
preferences and behaviours in relation to war. The war rhetoric is also reported as an
important issue that can influence the people’s understanding of war, as well as war’s
course of events. Hence, through adopting a discursive psychological approach to
analysis, this thesis examines several important issues simultaneously. Accounts of
the wars and collective identities are approached as communicative resources that are
constructed and deployed as a means to accomplish social actions.
This thesis examines, specifically, how different Iraqi laypeople and
politicians construct the 2003 American and Allies intervention in Iraq, with focus on
collective identity. It also examines how various Lebanese construe the events of the
2006 war and the civil strife that occurred during and afterward this war. The data is
taken from three sources. The first one is represented by semi-structured interviews
conducted in Lebanon in October 2006. The second source is TV interviews
conducted and broadcasted live with Iraqi politicians and decision makers in the
period from 2003 to 2008 and with Lebanese politicians from 2006 to 2008. The
third source is an open-ended question distributed in Basra City, Iraq in May 2005 as
part of an extensive questionnaire.
This study has several practical and theoretical implications to psychology in
general and in particular to the study of armed conflicts. The first contribution is
highlighting the importance of analysing laypeople’s rhetorical accounts of wars, as
directly involved people can and do present surprisingly different discourses from the
outsiders’. I argue that to gain a realistic and applicable understanding of the
discourse of war, its function and its potential implications, it is necessary to study
the general public’s versions of such experience in addition to the elite’s discourses.
The analysis shows that different participants have constructed different action-oriented
accounts of the same war. Within these various accounts the participants
invoked and incorporated a number of different stimulating notions, such as dignity,
nationalism, religion, resilience and victory as part of the rational of the war. These
accounts have important practical and discursive functions, such as establishing,
warranting, rejecting, and promoting specific views of the war, the involved sides,
and the appropriate course of action. Secondly, this study contributes to the
theoretical understanding of the role of rhetorical collective identity during armed
conflicts. The analysis shows that collective identities attain their meanings and their
functions from, by, and through the accounts they are situated within. Thirdly, the
findings of this thesis highlight the complex and consequential role of rhetorical
accounts in relation to wars and to violence and the relevance of qualitative analysis.
I argue that discourse of war can obscure its destructive effects, which in turn can
contribute to maintaining people’s psychological equilibrium but, also, prolong the
conflict. Thus, exposing the rhetorical strategies that legitimate war and warrant
killing other people can be an important step toward making war unconditionally
morally unacceptable.