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Abjection, materiality and ontological security: A study of the unfinished Church of Christ the Saviour in Pristina

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2020
Authors
Ejdus, Filip
Article (Published version)
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Abstract
Ontological security scholarship in International Relations (IR) has predominantly focused on the importance of social environments for the healthy sense of self. However, material environments can also provide an important source of ontological security. In my previous work I have argued that to assume this role of 'ontic spaces' material environments need to be discursively linked to states' self-identity either through projection or introjection. In this article, I draw on the work of Julia Kristeva to argue that ontic spaces can also come about through abjection or the rejection of a material environment from the narrative of the self. I illustrate this theoretical point in the case study of the Serbian Orthodox Church of Christ the Saviour in Pristina. Its construction began in 1992 during the rule of Slobodan Milosevic but was never finished due to the Kosovo war in 1998/9. Over the years, as all proposed changes are considered to be a threat to a healthy sense of self of either ...Serbs or Albanians, the building has been turned into an abjected ontic space, an ambiguous symbol undermining the self/other and victim/oppressor boundaries and as such both repels and attracts, threatens and protects.

Keywords:
Ontological security / ontic space / materiality / abjection / Kosovo / Serbia / Church of Christ the Saviour
Source:
Cooperation and Conflict, 2020
Publisher:
  • Sage Publications Ltd, London
Funding / projects:
  • Serbia’s political identity in the regional and global context (RS-179076)

DOI: 10.1177/0010836720972435

ISSN: 0010-8367

WoS: 000598436800001

Scopus: 2-s2.0-85095418769
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1
URI
http://rfpn.fpn.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/766
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  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers' papers
Institution/Community
FPN
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Ejdus, Filip
PY  - 2020
UR  - http://rfpn.fpn.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/766
AB  - Ontological security scholarship in International Relations (IR) has predominantly focused on the importance of social environments for the healthy sense of self. However, material environments can also provide an important source of ontological security. In my previous work I have argued that to assume this role of 'ontic spaces' material environments need to be discursively linked to states' self-identity either through projection or introjection. In this article, I draw on the work of Julia Kristeva to argue that ontic spaces can also come about through abjection or the rejection of a material environment from the narrative of the self. I illustrate this theoretical point in the case study of the Serbian Orthodox Church of Christ the Saviour in Pristina. Its construction began in 1992 during the rule of Slobodan Milosevic but was never finished due to the Kosovo war in 1998/9. Over the years, as all proposed changes are considered to be a threat to a healthy sense of self of either Serbs or Albanians, the building has been turned into an abjected ontic space, an ambiguous symbol undermining the self/other and victim/oppressor boundaries and as such both repels and attracts, threatens and protects.
PB  - Sage Publications Ltd, London
T2  - Cooperation and Conflict
T1  - Abjection, materiality and ontological security: A study of the unfinished Church of Christ the Saviour in Pristina
DO  - 10.1177/0010836720972435
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Ejdus, Filip",
year = "2020",
abstract = "Ontological security scholarship in International Relations (IR) has predominantly focused on the importance of social environments for the healthy sense of self. However, material environments can also provide an important source of ontological security. In my previous work I have argued that to assume this role of 'ontic spaces' material environments need to be discursively linked to states' self-identity either through projection or introjection. In this article, I draw on the work of Julia Kristeva to argue that ontic spaces can also come about through abjection or the rejection of a material environment from the narrative of the self. I illustrate this theoretical point in the case study of the Serbian Orthodox Church of Christ the Saviour in Pristina. Its construction began in 1992 during the rule of Slobodan Milosevic but was never finished due to the Kosovo war in 1998/9. Over the years, as all proposed changes are considered to be a threat to a healthy sense of self of either Serbs or Albanians, the building has been turned into an abjected ontic space, an ambiguous symbol undermining the self/other and victim/oppressor boundaries and as such both repels and attracts, threatens and protects.",
publisher = "Sage Publications Ltd, London",
journal = "Cooperation and Conflict",
title = "Abjection, materiality and ontological security: A study of the unfinished Church of Christ the Saviour in Pristina",
doi = "10.1177/0010836720972435"
}
Ejdus, F.. (2020). Abjection, materiality and ontological security: A study of the unfinished Church of Christ the Saviour in Pristina. in Cooperation and Conflict
Sage Publications Ltd, London..
https://doi.org/10.1177/0010836720972435
Ejdus F. Abjection, materiality and ontological security: A study of the unfinished Church of Christ the Saviour in Pristina. in Cooperation and Conflict. 2020;.
doi:10.1177/0010836720972435 .
Ejdus, Filip, "Abjection, materiality and ontological security: A study of the unfinished Church of Christ the Saviour in Pristina" in Cooperation and Conflict (2020),
https://doi.org/10.1177/0010836720972435 . .

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