Description

Book Synopsis
This ethnography of violence in Jamaica repudiates cultural explanations for violence, arguing that its roots lie in deep racialized and gendered inequalities produced in imperial slave economies.

Trade Review
“Deborah A. Thomas’s Exceptional Violence is at once methodologically astute, richly researched, and critically engaged. In reframing the historical object of violence in Jamaica, she enables us to see hitherto obscured dimensions of its embodied constitution as social practice and social imaginary, its relation to citizenship and gender, the state and community, racial subjectivities and transnational migrations. It is a fine achievement.”—David Scott, Columbia University
“In this supremely engaging book, Deborah A. Thomas puts to rest a number of procrustean, often racist, preconceptions about violence in Jamaica and, by extension, other postcolonies. Arguing persuasively against ‘culturalist’ explanations, she seeks to make sense of the incidence of and the preoccupation with violence in Jamaica by placing that violence in its proper historical context—one that turns out to be highly complex, deeply entangled, and temporally disjunctive. But Thomas does more than this. She opens up a window into the very soul of Jamaica and its diasporas, examining how Jamaicans today envisage and make their futures; how new, embodied forms of subjectivity and citizenship are being practiced and performed; and how we may understand the role of ‘culture’ and representation in these processes. Exceptional Violence is the kind of book from which not only every anthropologist but every intelligent reader will learn something worth knowing. And worth thinking deeply about.”—John Comaroff, University of Chicago and the American Bar Foundation
Exceptional Violence is a complicated study.... In her analysis of the way anthropology deals with violence, slavery, inequity, crime, and so on, Thomas demonstrates broad reading and a highly critical mind.” -- Gert Oostindie * European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies *
“The volume… [is] an academic engagement of the imagination, possibly the last bastion for generating some creative insights into what ails Jamaica generally.” -- Ralph Premdas * Ethnic and Racial Studies *
“What is most impressive about this ethnography is Thomas’s ability to consistently link her work to an existing body of scholarship in the various fields on which she draws in developing her analysis. This is a well-researched book that offers a thorough engagement with relevant scholarship. It is a key part of the global conversation on violence and reparations in the African Diaspora.” -- Keisha-Khan Y. Perry * Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology *
Exceptional Violence is a theoretically sophisticated examination of contemporary Jamaica, with much to offer students of postcolonialism, anthropology, transnationalism, and the African diaspora.” -- Mark Anderson * Bulletin of Latin American Research *
"I recommend this book to all persons from varied and interlocking disciplines of critical theory, critical race theory, politics, economics, history, and philosophy.... Additionally, any person keen on making informed and constructive contributions to discussions about issues that shape within the United States should visit Thomas’s work and learn from her." -- Julian Ledford * Ameriquests *

Table of Contents
Acknowledgments ix
Introduction. Moving Bodies 1
1. Dead Bodies, 2004–2005 23
2. Deviant Bodies, 2005/1945 53
3. Spectacular Bodies, 1816/2007 87
4. Public Bodies, 2003 125
5. Resurrected Bodies, 1963/2007 173
CODA Repairing Bodies 221
Notes 239
References 257
Index 289

Exceptional Violence

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    A Paperback / softback by Deborah A. Thomas

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      Publisher: Duke University Press
      Publication Date: 05/10/2011
      ISBN13: 9780822350866, 978-0822350866
      ISBN10: 0822350866

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      This ethnography of violence in Jamaica repudiates cultural explanations for violence, arguing that its roots lie in deep racialized and gendered inequalities produced in imperial slave economies.

      Trade Review
      “Deborah A. Thomas’s Exceptional Violence is at once methodologically astute, richly researched, and critically engaged. In reframing the historical object of violence in Jamaica, she enables us to see hitherto obscured dimensions of its embodied constitution as social practice and social imaginary, its relation to citizenship and gender, the state and community, racial subjectivities and transnational migrations. It is a fine achievement.”—David Scott, Columbia University
      “In this supremely engaging book, Deborah A. Thomas puts to rest a number of procrustean, often racist, preconceptions about violence in Jamaica and, by extension, other postcolonies. Arguing persuasively against ‘culturalist’ explanations, she seeks to make sense of the incidence of and the preoccupation with violence in Jamaica by placing that violence in its proper historical context—one that turns out to be highly complex, deeply entangled, and temporally disjunctive. But Thomas does more than this. She opens up a window into the very soul of Jamaica and its diasporas, examining how Jamaicans today envisage and make their futures; how new, embodied forms of subjectivity and citizenship are being practiced and performed; and how we may understand the role of ‘culture’ and representation in these processes. Exceptional Violence is the kind of book from which not only every anthropologist but every intelligent reader will learn something worth knowing. And worth thinking deeply about.”—John Comaroff, University of Chicago and the American Bar Foundation
      Exceptional Violence is a complicated study.... In her analysis of the way anthropology deals with violence, slavery, inequity, crime, and so on, Thomas demonstrates broad reading and a highly critical mind.” -- Gert Oostindie * European Review of Latin American and Caribbean Studies *
      “The volume… [is] an academic engagement of the imagination, possibly the last bastion for generating some creative insights into what ails Jamaica generally.” -- Ralph Premdas * Ethnic and Racial Studies *
      “What is most impressive about this ethnography is Thomas’s ability to consistently link her work to an existing body of scholarship in the various fields on which she draws in developing her analysis. This is a well-researched book that offers a thorough engagement with relevant scholarship. It is a key part of the global conversation on violence and reparations in the African Diaspora.” -- Keisha-Khan Y. Perry * Journal of Latin American and Caribbean Anthropology *
      Exceptional Violence is a theoretically sophisticated examination of contemporary Jamaica, with much to offer students of postcolonialism, anthropology, transnationalism, and the African diaspora.” -- Mark Anderson * Bulletin of Latin American Research *
      "I recommend this book to all persons from varied and interlocking disciplines of critical theory, critical race theory, politics, economics, history, and philosophy.... Additionally, any person keen on making informed and constructive contributions to discussions about issues that shape within the United States should visit Thomas’s work and learn from her." -- Julian Ledford * Ameriquests *

      Table of Contents
      Acknowledgments ix
      Introduction. Moving Bodies 1
      1. Dead Bodies, 2004–2005 23
      2. Deviant Bodies, 2005/1945 53
      3. Spectacular Bodies, 1816/2007 87
      4. Public Bodies, 2003 125
      5. Resurrected Bodies, 1963/2007 173
      CODA Repairing Bodies 221
      Notes 239
      References 257
      Index 289

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