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The absent pirate: exceeding justice in the Indian Ocean

Stephanie Jones

Journal of Eastern African Studies, 2015, vol. 9, issue 3, 522-535

Abstract: Legal, literary and visual archives are replete with absent pirates. It is remarkable how often the pirate is only partly delineated or seen from a distance, is ghostly, or plotted off-stage. These figurations variously nerve and unnerve imperial discourses and narratives of justice. This paper addresses some recent, fictional non-representations of ‘the Somali pirate’. I propose that this absenting of the pirate is critical to the texts’ various approaches or reproaches to justice. I further suggest that these fictions are concerned with an ethics of proximity – of physical space and geographical affect – that exceeds the primacy and virtue of ‘justice’.

Date: 2015
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DOI: 10.1080/17531055.2015.1087682

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