Ben Gurion University
Ben Gurion University - Neve Gordon (Dept of Political
Science) compares Israel's use of Barbed Wire to the Nazi
construction of Dachau
While this analysis appears accurate when
thinking of the Nazi concentration camps, it does not ring true in
relation to World War I. It is precisely the diverse historical
roles barbed wire has played—both as sign and as action—in the
modern process of separating and homogenizing society that needs to
be exposed, analyzed and explained.
Explicating and trying to understand the
continued widespread use of barbed wire could have added an
additional dimension to this fascinating book. For example,
examining the architectural similarity and differences between the
camps Israel has constructed to hold Palestinians and the
concentration camps Jews were held in during the Holocaust, urges
one to ponder how it is that the reappearance of barbed wire in the
Israeli landscape does not engender an outcry among survivors.
http://www.inthesetimes.com/article/52/
Barbed wire at Dachau.
CULTURE » DECEMBER 6, 2002
Don't Fence Me In
BY NEVE GORDON
A copy of this article can be found here:
http://www.unz.org/Pub/InTheseTimes-2003jan06-00023
Don't Fence Me In
BY Neve Gordon
December 6, 2002
Have you ever thought about the baby-bottle
nipple and the extensive impact this small object has had on
society? Michel Foucault mentioned this simple innovation in an
interview, suggesting that it not only did away with the age-old
profession of wet nurses, but changed the lives of millions of
mothers. In many ways, the plastic nipple helped free women from
their imprisonment in the private realm, while facilitating the
possibility of egalitarian parenthood.
In his Prison Notebooks, Antonio Gramsci
briefly discusses the tin can, asserting that among other things it
helped shape modern warfare. The novel capacity to stock up canned
food in the trench storerooms—months in advance—prolonged World War
I and intensified its horrific effects.
While materialist histories of objects like the
tin can and the plastic nipple have yet to be written, Olivier Razac
recently took it upon himself to chronicle the invention and use of
barbed wire. The book is written in both a luring and lucid fashion
and is illustrated with arresting American and European archival
photographs.
————–
In 1874, J.F. Glidden, an Illinois farmer, took
out a patent for the barbed iron wire he had invented, and for a
machine that would mass-produce it. He wanted to help new American
farmers assert property ownership over their land. Sure enough, as
white newcomers moved west, rapidly fencing off the prairie, the
production of barbed wire shot up from 270 tons in 1875 to 135,000
tons in 1901.
The 1887 Dawes Act authorized the president to
parcel out Indian land to white farmers. Simply by fencing in their
newly acquired plots, white farmers managed to enclose the Indians
in reservations, cutting them off from hunting grounds. Barbed wire,
as Razac puts it, "chopped space into little bits and broke up the
communal structure of Indian society … [making] the Indian's
geographical and social environment hostile to them, so that it
became a foreign territory where the tribal way of life was
unimaginable and where nomadic wandering and hunting were
impossible. In short, it created the conditions for the physical and
cultural disappearance of the Indian."
During the same period, farmers employed the
wire to defeat the cattle barons, in what was labeled the "barbed
wire wars." In the Hollywood film Man Without a Star, the
very sight of barbed wire infuriates Kirk Douglas, who plays the
archetypical cowboy hero. "What's the matter?" asks the farmer. "I
don't like it," Douglas answers, "or what it's used for." With the
fencing in of the prairie, the cattle empire, founded on free
grazing, ultimately collapsed, and the lone cowboy riding over the
plains disappeared.
The lightness of the barbed wire and the
difficulty in spotting it converted the "bramble," as it was
frequently called, into a tactical apparatus employed in the
defensive structure of World War I trenches. Easily repaired or
replaced, barbed wire did away with soaring thick walls, creating a
network of entanglements that was a highly efficient obstacle
against the attack of enemy infantry. Combatants who were caught in
the wire were killed by rival fire. It is not coincidental that one
of the most vivid images from World War I is the corpse of a soldier
entangled in wire in the middle of no-man's-land.
————–
Barbed wire was also a central element in the
architectural design of the Nazi concentration camp. A double fence
of electrified barbed wire usually encircled the camp from the
outside, while a whole set of fences divided the inside, helping to
produce the totalitarian organization of space. "Everywhere," Primo
Levi wrote, "was the sinister tight iron grip. We never saw where
the barbed-wire fences ended, but we felt their malign presence
which separated us from the world."
The wire also assisted in shrouding the
extermination project in a veil of secrecy. At the Sobibor and
Treblinka camps, the path leading to the gas chambers was
camouflaged with barbed-wire braided with branches. The use of
barbed wire not only facilitated the organization of space, but also
this space's swift erasure. None of the concentration camps were
built to last; most were constructed in such a way that they could
easily be dismantled and thus could disappear from sight and, as
some hoped, from memory. "It was there," Razac points out, "but it
was not there. It was transient."
Despite the Nazi attempt to expunge their
existence, the concentration camps helped turn the image of barbed
wire into a graphic symbol of captivity, political violence and
death. Levi put it this way: "Liberty. The breach in the barbed wire
gave us a concrete image of it."
The book's second part provides a theoretical
analysis of how barbed wire was employed to manage space. Razac
cogently argues that its use should be understood as both a sign and
an action. As a sign, barbed wire "produces a kind of shock when it
is used to enclose people, shaking their certitude that they are
human. It confirms their fate: like beasts, they are to be worked or
slaughtered."
As an action, barbed wire excludes and
includes. "Its function is always to magnify differences between the
inside and the outside."
Razac employs Foucault's notion of "biopolitics,"
the idea that in the 18th century governing began to concern itself
with life—rather than death—by using a variety of techniques to
manage the lives of its subjects. The author maintains that barbed
wire was successful in the United States because it coincided with
the biopolitical needs of the whites, while helping to destroy
Indian society. Wittingly or unwittingly, Barbed Wire offers a
corrective to Foucault, for it shows that modern biopolitics is
often intricately tied to a thanatopolitics, the politics of
extermination and death.
But Razac's theoretical discussion is, in many
ways, also disappointing. My major reservation has to do with his
attempt to conflate, rather than to distinguish, the different ways
in which barbed wire was employed to manage space. He argues that
barbed wire was used to separate "those who will live from those who
will die," while producing a "distinction between those who are
allowed to retain their humanity and those reduced to mere bodies."
While this analysis appears accurate when
thinking of the Nazi concentration camps, it does not ring true in
relation to World War I. It is precisely the diverse historical
roles barbed wire has played—both as sign and as action—in the
modern process of separating and homogenizing society that needs to
be exposed, analyzed and explained.
Explicating and trying to understand the
continued widespread use of barbed wire could have added an
additional dimension to this fascinating book. For example,
examining the architectural similarity and differences between the
camps Israel has constructed to hold Palestinians and the
concentration camps Jews were held in during the Holocaust, urges
one to ponder how it is that the reappearance of barbed wire in the
Israeli landscape does not engender an outcry among survivors.
Does this silence put into question the
symbolic power of barbed wire, or does it underscore that this power
is always limited by its own context? Questions like these could
have problematized Razac's analysis, suggesting that the issues at
hand are often more complex than the book implies.
Neve Gordon teaches in the
Department of Politics and Government, Ben-Gurion University of the
Negev, in Israel. One can read about his most recent book, Israel's
Occupation, and more at www.israelsoccupation.info.
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