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International Law, Coloniality and Temporal Otherwise

Hamzić, Vanja

Authors



Abstract

What if the past and the future of international law can be thought of in temporal otherwise; a time that is, as Elizabeth Povinelli would put it, geontologically diverse; a time in which the lifeworlds of resistance to the violence of post- and/or neo-colonial international law can be (re-)encountered and re-centred to inform a novel, queerer theorising of the international, the legal and the subjecthoods they prop up and legitimise? In particular, what could such temporal refuges yield vis-à-vis an extractive, forcefully universalised linear time in which the canons and ‘foundational principles’ of international law found their logics and claims to authority?

This paper engages a distinct temporal and material locale—that of ‘proto-colonial’ eighteenth-century Senegambia—not only to ponder a circum-Atlantic early capitalist economy of enslavement and human fungibility in the making, in which international legal theory and practice of the time were fully complicit, but also to re-tell the story of radically different, insurrectionary West African conceptualisations of time and personhood. Dwelling on the example of gender- nonconforming Mande griots (jeliw) and their increasingly precarious lifeworlds, and learning from the Black radical tradition and decolonial queer and trans/feminist critique, this paper queries what’s ‘recent’ and what ‘distant’ in temporal inflections of international law. Against the abiding imperial intimacies and technologies of subjectivation that saturate the dominant projects of international legal time-reckoning and meaning-making, what can the stories, concepts and ways of being-in-the-world that emerge from temporal otherwise tell us, in Lisa Lowe’s words, about “the connections that could have been but were lost and are thus not yet”?

Citation

Hamzić, V. (2022, November). International Law, Coloniality and Temporal Otherwise. Paper presented at Queering International Law, 2.0, Deakin University, Melbourne, Australia

Presentation Conference Type Conference Paper (unpublished)
Conference Name Queering International Law, 2.0
Start Date Nov 1, 2022
End Date Nov 1, 2022
Acceptance Date Nov 10, 2022
Deposit Date Sep 20, 2023
Additional Information Event Type : Conference