On Irreconciliation
On Irreconciliation
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On Irreconciliation explores the ethnographic instances when survivors refuse to forgive in the face of persistent impunity of past injustices, particularly in the absence of the rule of law and staged processes of justice. It offers an interdisciplinary theorization that makes irreconciliation visible in various contexts, such as Northern Ireland, Papua New Guinea, Mozambique, Bangladesh, Canada, Argentina, Sri Lanka, Colombia, USA, and UK. The contributors demonstrate the relationship of irreconciliation with law, aesthetics, temporality, resistance, and the limits of the concept. It proposes an understanding of the past based on a positive commitment to irreconciliation and is of interest to anthropologists, historians, philosophers, critical legal and political theorists, peace, conflict resolution, and transitional justice scholars.
Format: Paperback / softback
Length: 192 pages
Publication date: 11 August 2022
Publisher: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
On Irreconciliation delves into the less explored but prevalent ethnographic instances where survivors refuse to forgive in the face of persistent impunity for past injustices, particularly in the presence of the rule of law and staged processes of justice that serve the powerful. This ethnographically informed, interdisciplinary theorization brings irreconciliation to the forefront in contexts such as Northern Ireland, Papua New Guinea, Mozambique, Bangladesh, Canada, Argentina, Sri Lanka, Colombia, USA, and UK. Triangulating a discussion of the rule of law within processes of unresolved genocidal injustices, it engages in debates surrounding statues of slave owners, racial prejudice, and institutional responses. Contributors showcase the relationship of irreconciliation with law, aesthetics, temporality, resistance, and the limitations of the concept. Making a theoretical and ethnographic case for irreconciliation as both a social and political phenomenon, the book proposes an understanding of the past based on a positive commitment to "irreconciliation," which will interest anthropologists, historians, philosophers, critical legal and political theorists, peace, conflict resolution, and transitional justice scholars.
Weight: 304g
Dimension: 259 x 176 x 8 (mm)
ISBN-13: 9781119933267
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