Description

Book Synopsis

This volume reflects on what happens when the idea and practice of universal human rights cross the cultural borders between different communities of knowledge. Although such rights are usually presumed to be founded on certain globally shared beliefs, the norms and values of many cultures are often incommensurable with these universal principles, and hence the need to translate and vernacularize them. Any law that would successfully institutionalize them must frame human rights in a way that defers to the historically constituted cultural capital of the society in which it is to function. The essays in this book seek to illuminate different cognitive contexts that produce different meanings of rights, identify spaces of intercultural crossings where differences can coexist, and offer usable narratives and metaphors that could help mediate between distinct cultures. They show that the path forward does not lead through a unified theory of human rights that can be applied globally, n

Trade Review
This volume provides a nuanced look at the intercultural complexities which arise—and the translations and dialogue necessary—when Western Enlightenment-infused notions of universal human rights traverse cultural and nation-state borders, especially in the spaces and contexts of the postcolonial non-West. The theoretical deliberations in the book are illuminated through current and historical case studies from across the world. These cases delve into the intersections of the universal and the local and highlight the inclusive possibilities that could emerge in the third spaces of being and knowing. By weaving together the knotty threads of the legal, policy-level, and cultural debates between individualism and individual rights, collectivism, differing cultural and societal perceptions regarding human rights and duties, and the need to protect human dignity as well as to respect cultural diversity, this volume keenly reminds us of the necessity of these debates in our world so interconnected yet fraught with violence and social injustices stemming from religious conflict, migration, the flow of refugees, gender politics, and other pressing transnational issues. -- Nilanjana Bardhan, Southern Illinois University
Notably since 1945 the discourse of human rights has become global, but what does this mean in the different contexts (conceptual, social, political, legal) in which the idea has been taken up? How do ideas forged in a specific Western—European and transatlantic—tradition ‘translate’ (literally and metaphorically) when crossing cultures? What happens if and when they do? And how should scholars and practitioners think about these phenomena? This valuable interdisciplinary collection, with its wide-ranging theoretical chapters and empirical case studies, draws on contemporary thinking about interculturality and intercultural dialogue, and brings a refreshingly new and illuminating approach to issues which, as the editor says, admit of no easy solution. -- Ralph Grillo, University of Sussex

Table of Contents

Part I: Conceptual Frameworks

Chapter 1: Human Rights and the Grammar of Interculturality, Michal Jan Rozbicki

Chapter 2: Human Rights against Human Rights: Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Interpretative Discrepancies, and Intercultural Transpositions, Mario Ricca

Part II: Rights and Religion

Chapter 3: Transgender Rights in Pakistan?: Global, Colonial, and Islamic Perspectives, Jeffrey A. Redding

Chapter 4: The Off-Centered Hub of Secularism: Religion Inside Human Rights Projections and Quotidian Life, Melisa Vazquez

Chapter 5: Migration’ as a Metaphor for Religious Conversion: a Reinterpretation of Freedom of Conscience and Belief in Colonial India and Pakistan, Shazia Ahmad

Part III: Rights and Migration

Chapter 6: Protestant Work Ethic Revisited: The Ephemeral Nature of Commitment to Human Rights, Hisako Matsuo and Rachel Santon

Chapter 7: Politics, Religion and Debt: Translating Lives into Normative Frameworks for Asylum Seekers in Italy, Tommaso Sbriccoli

Chapter 8: The Role of Human Rights Frameworks in Refugee Host State Integration, Rachel Santon

Part IV: Rights and Cultural Difference

Chapter 9: Defending Liberty from Tyranny in Dostoevsky's Siberia: The Impact of Captivity on an Intercultural Consensus Regarding Human Rights, Elizabeth Blake

Chapter 10: The ASEAN Human Rights Declaration as a Case of Human Rights Translation, Marcella Ferri

Chapter 11: The Color Curtain: Richard Wright on Race, Rights and Western Values, Anders Walker

Human Rights in Translation

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    A Paperback by Shazia Ahmad, Elizabeth Blake

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      View other formats and editions of Human Rights in Translation by

      Publisher: Lexington Books
      Publication Date: 1/15/2020 12:09:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781498581431, 978-1498581431
      ISBN10: 1498581439

      Description

      Book Synopsis

      This volume reflects on what happens when the idea and practice of universal human rights cross the cultural borders between different communities of knowledge. Although such rights are usually presumed to be founded on certain globally shared beliefs, the norms and values of many cultures are often incommensurable with these universal principles, and hence the need to translate and vernacularize them. Any law that would successfully institutionalize them must frame human rights in a way that defers to the historically constituted cultural capital of the society in which it is to function. The essays in this book seek to illuminate different cognitive contexts that produce different meanings of rights, identify spaces of intercultural crossings where differences can coexist, and offer usable narratives and metaphors that could help mediate between distinct cultures. They show that the path forward does not lead through a unified theory of human rights that can be applied globally, n

      Trade Review
      This volume provides a nuanced look at the intercultural complexities which arise—and the translations and dialogue necessary—when Western Enlightenment-infused notions of universal human rights traverse cultural and nation-state borders, especially in the spaces and contexts of the postcolonial non-West. The theoretical deliberations in the book are illuminated through current and historical case studies from across the world. These cases delve into the intersections of the universal and the local and highlight the inclusive possibilities that could emerge in the third spaces of being and knowing. By weaving together the knotty threads of the legal, policy-level, and cultural debates between individualism and individual rights, collectivism, differing cultural and societal perceptions regarding human rights and duties, and the need to protect human dignity as well as to respect cultural diversity, this volume keenly reminds us of the necessity of these debates in our world so interconnected yet fraught with violence and social injustices stemming from religious conflict, migration, the flow of refugees, gender politics, and other pressing transnational issues. -- Nilanjana Bardhan, Southern Illinois University
      Notably since 1945 the discourse of human rights has become global, but what does this mean in the different contexts (conceptual, social, political, legal) in which the idea has been taken up? How do ideas forged in a specific Western—European and transatlantic—tradition ‘translate’ (literally and metaphorically) when crossing cultures? What happens if and when they do? And how should scholars and practitioners think about these phenomena? This valuable interdisciplinary collection, with its wide-ranging theoretical chapters and empirical case studies, draws on contemporary thinking about interculturality and intercultural dialogue, and brings a refreshingly new and illuminating approach to issues which, as the editor says, admit of no easy solution. -- Ralph Grillo, University of Sussex

      Table of Contents

      Part I: Conceptual Frameworks

      Chapter 1: Human Rights and the Grammar of Interculturality, Michal Jan Rozbicki

      Chapter 2: Human Rights against Human Rights: Universal Declaration of Human Rights, Interpretative Discrepancies, and Intercultural Transpositions, Mario Ricca

      Part II: Rights and Religion

      Chapter 3: Transgender Rights in Pakistan?: Global, Colonial, and Islamic Perspectives, Jeffrey A. Redding

      Chapter 4: The Off-Centered Hub of Secularism: Religion Inside Human Rights Projections and Quotidian Life, Melisa Vazquez

      Chapter 5: Migration’ as a Metaphor for Religious Conversion: a Reinterpretation of Freedom of Conscience and Belief in Colonial India and Pakistan, Shazia Ahmad

      Part III: Rights and Migration

      Chapter 6: Protestant Work Ethic Revisited: The Ephemeral Nature of Commitment to Human Rights, Hisako Matsuo and Rachel Santon

      Chapter 7: Politics, Religion and Debt: Translating Lives into Normative Frameworks for Asylum Seekers in Italy, Tommaso Sbriccoli

      Chapter 8: The Role of Human Rights Frameworks in Refugee Host State Integration, Rachel Santon

      Part IV: Rights and Cultural Difference

      Chapter 9: Defending Liberty from Tyranny in Dostoevsky's Siberia: The Impact of Captivity on an Intercultural Consensus Regarding Human Rights, Elizabeth Blake

      Chapter 10: The ASEAN Human Rights Declaration as a Case of Human Rights Translation, Marcella Ferri

      Chapter 11: The Color Curtain: Richard Wright on Race, Rights and Western Values, Anders Walker

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