Arts & International Affairs: Vol. 3, No. 2, Summer/Autumn 2018 | Page 6

INTRODUCTION: INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS ARE ACOUSTIC. LET’S LISTEN! that reveals numerous examples in the international arena. Diplomats must also learn to listen carefully; their ears can be far more important than their mouths. • To shed light on international interactions by other means. Diplomacy is compared to an art, but rarely such comparison has been taken seriously. And yet, classical diplomatic functions include an acoustic aspect (Ahrendt et al. 2014; Bély 2003). For example, music accompanies the rituals of diplomatic conferences from bilateral to multilateral meetings without forgetting the celebration of peace treaties as well. Diplomats promote new artists and genres thanks to their resources and networks. In other words, musical scenes�open or restricted, visible or not�are closely linked to diplomatic scenes (Ramel and Prévost-Thomas 2018). Furthermore, we can also observe a sonic dimension of wars (Daughtry 2015; Jardin 2016) that is not limited to an instrumental conception of music and sounds: the usages of Ipod during warfare for stimulating courage, the acousmatic torture of prisoners in Guantanamo, or the usage of music therapy for tending to the veterans. Understanding the role of music in wars supposes here to take into account emotions, senses, and sensation (Hast 2017). • To transcend the “turns” in IR. Music embodies a “supreme mystery” for Human sciences according to Claude Lévi-Strauss in Le cru et le cuit (Lévi-Strauss, 2009). Despite the methodological difficulties, describing musicians, songs, performances in International Affairs, music can be approached as a total social fact to highlight the relations between war, diplomacy, and society. For instance, it takes into account the role of practices (practical turn) and of materiality (materialist turn) as well. Without using a unique perspective inspired by Bourdieu, for instance, this path means to describe musical practices in international relations but also the spaces where music�or sound�resonates that are all but neutral... For example, the concert organized by President Putin in Palmyre during May 2016 is a strong symbolic gesture that sets up a link between strategic practices during war in Syria and music for strengthening the political image of Russia in the Middle-East. Furthermore, the acoustic turn does not exclude a priori modes of thinking or conceptual tools. On the contrary, it gives opportunity to enrich a sociology of International Relations (Albert and Lapid 2016). For instance, how should we understand concerts as a gift in diplomacy? What are the symbolic dimensions of music inside intergovernmental organizations? What are the links between the circulation of music across borders and the constitution of an international society? Many articles of Arts and International Affairs have already provided some directions in previous issues from the idea of performance (Volume 2, Issue 1) to cultural conversations (Volume 2, Issue 2). This current issue is composed of two Longform articles, two brushstrokes and one multimodal. The two Longform articles deal with classical 3