This article treats the ideational process that turns men into warring bodies. Beginning with a gloss on Immanuel Kant?s Perpetual Peace, where he expresses optimism about the peace-fostering potential of publicity, the analysis notes Kant?s neglect of what Michel Foucault calls ?the coercive structure of the signifier? and goes on to a reading of Michael Cimono?s film The Deer Hunter, which focuses on the discursive frailties that grease the skids for youth to slide from child-like innocence to nationalist-macho violence. The Deer Hunter, which provides an elaborate treatment of the transition from working to warring bodies, features a group of young men whose lack of a discursive rapport with themselves ? much less with each other ? makes them susceptible to becoming ?warriors?, sent out to an exotic venue in order to ?proudly serve their country? (as the MC directing the wedding festivities in the first half of the film puts it). Contrasting the thought world of the characters in The Deer Hunter with more discursively complex models of thought, the article ends with a speculation on the importance of genre disruption, and the scrambling of codes as antidotes to the linguistic claustrophobia that often attends unreflective transitions from citizen subjects to warring bodies. |