Counter-Insurgency can be explained by rebelling against the everyday, against the system, against a set of rules and laws. Though I was at loss how to connect much of this week's reading to the everyday, I did connect through Guha's piece on peasant rebellion. I enjoyed that he refuted that rebellions are "spontaneous" and are "unpremeditated affairs," though I cannot think who would think that. Rebellions are planned, usually stemming from a psychology of bitterness or dissatisfaction against the everyday rule.
If you were to equate the everyday with commonality then the peasant life would surely come to mind, in contrast to a more bourgeoisie lifestyle. Peasants are of the everyday and if something is interrupting their daily life or daily freedoms, rebellions are sure to come from this sector of the population. It is usually a "reflex" action, as Guha describes it, a reaction to physically or economic suffering.
However. I'm sure what he means by "either way insurgency is regarded as external to the peasant's consciousness and Cause is made to stand in as a phantom surrogate for Reason, the logic of that conscious." I'd like to expand on his argument but I have trouble pinning down what he means by their "consciousness".
Jennie Ziegler
Monday, February 16, 2009
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