Filip Ejdus’ book Crisis and Ontological Insecurity Serbia’s Anxiety over Kosovo’s Secession
5 nov 2020


IFDT organizes an online discussion on the latest book of Filip Ejdus Crisis and Ontological Insecurity: Serbia’s Anxiety over Kosovo’s Secession (Cham: Palgrave Macmillan, 2020).
Participants: Jelena Subotić (Georgia State University, Atlanta), Lea David (University College Dublin), Jelena Cupać (WZB Berlin Social Science Center), Agon Maliqi (Sbunker, Prishtina), Gezim Krasniqi (University of Edinburgh), Aleksandar Pavlović (IFDT, Belgrade), Vladimir Cvetković (IFDT, Belgrade). Moderated by Gazela Pudar Draško.
The book develops a novel way of thinking about crises in world politics. By building on ontological security theory, this work conceptualises critical situations as radical disjunctions that challenge the ability of collective agents to ‘go on’. These ontological crises bring into the realm of discursive consciousness four fundamental questions related to existence, finitude, relations and autobiography. In times of crisis, collective agents such as states are particularly attached to their ontic spaces, or spatial extensions of the self that cause collective identities to appear more firm and continuous. These theoretical arguments are illustrated in a case study looking at Serbia’s anxiety over the secession of Kosovo. The author argues that Serbia’s seemingly irrational and self-harming policy vis-à-vis Kosovo can be understood as a form of ontological self-help. It is a rational pursuit of biographical continuity and a healthy sense of self in the face of an ontological crisis triggered by the secession of a province that has been constructed as the ontic space of the Serbian nation since the late 19th century.
In a nutshell, this book thus offers an innovative psychological-political explanation why Serbia so desperately clings to Kosovo as part of its territory, and through this case study ambitiously goes further to show how states as political entities, , just as individuals do, rest on self-identitarian narratives.
The event is finished.
Date
- 5. November 2020
- Expired!
