Description

Book Synopsis

Genocide and Victimology examines genocide in its diverse features, from different yet connected perspectives, to offer an interdisciplinary, victimological imagination of genocide. It will include in its exploration critical and cultural victimologies and criminologies of genocide, accompanied by, and recognising, the rich scholarship on genocide in the fields of religion and history, theatre studies and photography, philosophy and existentialism, post-colonialism, and ethnography and biography.

Bringing together theory with empirical research and drawing on a range of case studies, such as the Treblinka extermination camp, the Bosnian and Rwandan genocides, the Sagkeeng First Nation in Manitoba, Canada, and genocidal violence in Syria and Iraq, this book engages the victimological imagination towards an interdisciplinary, cosmopolitan victimology of genocide. Bundled and intertwined, the wide yet integrated variety of perspectives on genocide gives readers a victim

Trade Review

This is an important and sometimes unsettling work. It is a hard truth that victimology has all but neglected the most atrocious of crimes, and has yet to scratch the surface of paths to and limits of understanding genocide victimization. This book is therefore already valuable in highlighting this gap. But Yarin Eski and his contributors go well beyond mere gap-spotting. He has succeeded in bringing together an array of leading scholars, each bringing their A-game to the volume, asking many difficult questions, offering an initial glimpse of what the answers to them might be and much in the way of inspiration for further investigation.

Antony Pemberton, Leuven Institute of Criminology, KU Leuven; NSCR, Amsterdam.​



Table of Contents

Introduction 1.An existentialist victimology of genocide? 2.Victimology and genocide: neglected stories? 3. International criminal justice and the religion of humanity 4.The Rohingya Crisis: Accountability for Decades of Persecution 5.LGBT+ Genocide: Understanding Hetero-Nationality and the Politics of Psychological Silence 6. Symbiotic Victimization and Destruction: Law and Human/Other-Than-Human Relationality in Genocide 7.On ‘visualising the truth of genocide’: reflections on whakapapa and finding southern epistemology, occasioned by a tattered album from the nomos of the Holocaust 8.‘Playing Srebrenica’ - Theatre plays in the Netherlands regarding Srebrenica 9.The Role of Past Victimization in Genocidal Mythologies: Bosnian and Rwandan Experiences 10.Genocide and Forced Migration: The Dual Victimisation of Refugees Escaping War and Genocide 11.Fortress Britain or Migratory Haven? Genocide survivors’ experiences of Migration to the UK Conclusion: A victimological imagination of genocide

Genocide and Victimology

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    A Paperback by Yarin Eski

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      Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
      Publication Date: 5/30/2022 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780367635787, 978-0367635787
      ISBN10: 036763578X

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      Genocide and Victimology examines genocide in its diverse features, from different yet connected perspectives, to offer an interdisciplinary, victimological imagination of genocide. It will include in its exploration critical and cultural victimologies and criminologies of genocide, accompanied by, and recognising, the rich scholarship on genocide in the fields of religion and history, theatre studies and photography, philosophy and existentialism, post-colonialism, and ethnography and biography.

      Bringing together theory with empirical research and drawing on a range of case studies, such as the Treblinka extermination camp, the Bosnian and Rwandan genocides, the Sagkeeng First Nation in Manitoba, Canada, and genocidal violence in Syria and Iraq, this book engages the victimological imagination towards an interdisciplinary, cosmopolitan victimology of genocide. Bundled and intertwined, the wide yet integrated variety of perspectives on genocide gives readers a victim

      Trade Review

      This is an important and sometimes unsettling work. It is a hard truth that victimology has all but neglected the most atrocious of crimes, and has yet to scratch the surface of paths to and limits of understanding genocide victimization. This book is therefore already valuable in highlighting this gap. But Yarin Eski and his contributors go well beyond mere gap-spotting. He has succeeded in bringing together an array of leading scholars, each bringing their A-game to the volume, asking many difficult questions, offering an initial glimpse of what the answers to them might be and much in the way of inspiration for further investigation.

      Antony Pemberton, Leuven Institute of Criminology, KU Leuven; NSCR, Amsterdam.​



      Table of Contents

      Introduction 1.An existentialist victimology of genocide? 2.Victimology and genocide: neglected stories? 3. International criminal justice and the religion of humanity 4.The Rohingya Crisis: Accountability for Decades of Persecution 5.LGBT+ Genocide: Understanding Hetero-Nationality and the Politics of Psychological Silence 6. Symbiotic Victimization and Destruction: Law and Human/Other-Than-Human Relationality in Genocide 7.On ‘visualising the truth of genocide’: reflections on whakapapa and finding southern epistemology, occasioned by a tattered album from the nomos of the Holocaust 8.‘Playing Srebrenica’ - Theatre plays in the Netherlands regarding Srebrenica 9.The Role of Past Victimization in Genocidal Mythologies: Bosnian and Rwandan Experiences 10.Genocide and Forced Migration: The Dual Victimisation of Refugees Escaping War and Genocide 11.Fortress Britain or Migratory Haven? Genocide survivors’ experiences of Migration to the UK Conclusion: A victimological imagination of genocide

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