McKenzie2001

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McKenzie2001
BibType ARTICLE
Key McKenzie2001
Author(s) Kevin McKenzie
Title Fact and the Narratives of War: Produced Undecidability in Accounts of Armed Conflict
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, conflict resolution, fact construction, memory, narrative analysis, social remembering
Publisher
Year 2001
Language
City
Month
Journal Human Studies
Volume 24
Number 3
Pages 187–209
URL Link
DOI 10.1023/A:1017543122464
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This paper explores how providing the inferential basis to argue for a range of equally plausible interpretations features as a way of managing issues of accountability in talk about armed confrontation. We examine conversation produced in open-ended interviews with diplomatic representatives of the United States and Great Britain in discussion about those countries' involvement in the Persian Gulf conflict of 1990–91. By providing the inferential basis upon which to argue for a range of equally plausible interpretative scenarios, speakers attend to the potential for any one account to be privileged over another. Further, in speculating upon the relationship between interpretative particulars and the inferential outcome to be drawn for some specific version of events in question, speakers work to establish the parameters of an admissible narrative trajectory with which to account for those events. In so doing, they manage the implications that excluded versions would otherwise make relevant.

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