Description

Book Synopsis
Reflections on politics, loss and reconciliation in Europe and the Middle East

Trade Review

Loss is a fundamental human condition that often leads both individuals and groups to seek redress in the form of violence . . . This book focuses on the redress of political crime in Germany and Lebanon, extending its analysis to questions of accountability and democratization in the United States and elsewhere. Feb. 2014

* Allegra *

John Borneman's book provides a series of thoughtful and wide-ranging reflections on ethics and politics, drawing on scholarship in anthropology, social and political theory, and psychoanalysis, as well as extensive ethnographic fieldwork. . . . Expansive in scope, each essay is clearly written and insightful, and will appeal to a wide range of scholars concerned with issues of memory, accountability, democratization, and international geopolitics, as well as the histories and politics of Europe and the Middle East.

* Intl Jrnl Middle East Studies *

[T]his is an engaging, often idiosyncratic, and consistently provocative collection of essays.

* PoLAR *

[This]book . . . is highly relevant to a number of regional and investigative arenas, including psychological and political anthropology, as well as history, gender, and the study of violence, trauma, and reconciliation. In also seeking to bring classic anthropology into conversation with critical forms of contemporaneous anthropology, the book also serves as an example for the continuing relevance of anthropology in public and international debates.

* American Ethnologist *

Borneman has produced an important book, and his discussion of modes of accountability and their significance in assessing and comparing political crimes and their ongoing memory is very useful.

* H-Memory *

Table of Contents

Preface: Political Crime and the Memory of Loss

I. Accountability
1. Modes of Accountability: Events of Closure, Rites of Repetition
2. On Money and the Memory of Loss
3. Public Apologies, Dignity, and Performative Redress
4. Reconciliation after Ethnic Cleansing: Listening, Retribution, and Affiliation
5. The State of War Crimes following the Israeli-Hezbollah War
6. Terror, Compassion, and the Limits of Identification: Counter-Transference and Rites of Commemoration in Lebanon

II. Regime Change, Occupation, Democratization
7. Responsibility after Military Intervention: What is Regime Change? What is Occupation?
8. Does the United States want Democratization in Iraq? Anthropological Reflections on the Export of Political Form
9. The External Ascription of Defeat and Collective Punishment

III. An Anthropology of Democratic Authority
10. What do Election Rituals Mean? Representation, Sacrifice, and Cynical Reason
11. Politics without a Head: Is the Love Parade a New Form of Political Identification? (with Stefan Senders)
12. Is the United States Europe's Other? On the Relations of Americans, Europeans, Jews, Arabs, Muslims

Notes
References

Political Crime and the Memory of Loss

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    A Paperback / softback by John Borneman

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      View other formats and editions of Political Crime and the Memory of Loss by John Borneman

      Publisher: Indiana University Press
      Publication Date: 04/10/2011
      ISBN13: 9780253223517, 978-0253223517
      ISBN10: 0253223512

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Reflections on politics, loss and reconciliation in Europe and the Middle East

      Trade Review

      Loss is a fundamental human condition that often leads both individuals and groups to seek redress in the form of violence . . . This book focuses on the redress of political crime in Germany and Lebanon, extending its analysis to questions of accountability and democratization in the United States and elsewhere. Feb. 2014

      * Allegra *

      John Borneman's book provides a series of thoughtful and wide-ranging reflections on ethics and politics, drawing on scholarship in anthropology, social and political theory, and psychoanalysis, as well as extensive ethnographic fieldwork. . . . Expansive in scope, each essay is clearly written and insightful, and will appeal to a wide range of scholars concerned with issues of memory, accountability, democratization, and international geopolitics, as well as the histories and politics of Europe and the Middle East.

      * Intl Jrnl Middle East Studies *

      [T]his is an engaging, often idiosyncratic, and consistently provocative collection of essays.

      * PoLAR *

      [This]book . . . is highly relevant to a number of regional and investigative arenas, including psychological and political anthropology, as well as history, gender, and the study of violence, trauma, and reconciliation. In also seeking to bring classic anthropology into conversation with critical forms of contemporaneous anthropology, the book also serves as an example for the continuing relevance of anthropology in public and international debates.

      * American Ethnologist *

      Borneman has produced an important book, and his discussion of modes of accountability and their significance in assessing and comparing political crimes and their ongoing memory is very useful.

      * H-Memory *

      Table of Contents

      Preface: Political Crime and the Memory of Loss

      I. Accountability
      1. Modes of Accountability: Events of Closure, Rites of Repetition
      2. On Money and the Memory of Loss
      3. Public Apologies, Dignity, and Performative Redress
      4. Reconciliation after Ethnic Cleansing: Listening, Retribution, and Affiliation
      5. The State of War Crimes following the Israeli-Hezbollah War
      6. Terror, Compassion, and the Limits of Identification: Counter-Transference and Rites of Commemoration in Lebanon

      II. Regime Change, Occupation, Democratization
      7. Responsibility after Military Intervention: What is Regime Change? What is Occupation?
      8. Does the United States want Democratization in Iraq? Anthropological Reflections on the Export of Political Form
      9. The External Ascription of Defeat and Collective Punishment

      III. An Anthropology of Democratic Authority
      10. What do Election Rituals Mean? Representation, Sacrifice, and Cynical Reason
      11. Politics without a Head: Is the Love Parade a New Form of Political Identification? (with Stefan Senders)
      12. Is the United States Europe's Other? On the Relations of Americans, Europeans, Jews, Arabs, Muslims

      Notes
      References

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