This Side of Silence This Side of Silence

This Side of Silence

Human Rights, Torture, and the Recognition of Cruelty

    • 35,99 €
    • 35,99 €

Descrizione dell’editore

We are accustomed to thinking of torture as the purposeful infliction of cruelty by public officials, and we assume that lawyers and clinicians are best placed to speak about its causes and effects. However, it has not always been so. The category of torture is a very specific way of thinking about violence, and our current understandings of the term are rooted in recent twentieth-century history. In This Side of Silence, social anthropologist Tobias Kelly argues that the tensions between post-Cold War armed conflict, human rights activism, medical notions of suffering, and concerns over immigration have produced a distinctively new way of thinking about torture, which is saturated with notions of law and trauma.

This Side of Silence asks what forms of suffering and cruelty can be acknowledged when looking at the world through the narrow legal category of torture. The book focuses on the recent history of Britain but draws wider comparative conclusions, tracing attempts to recognize survivors and perpetrators across the fields of asylum, criminal law, international human rights, and military justice. In this thorough and eloquent ethnography, Kelly avoids treating the legal prohibition of torture as the inevitable product of progress and yet does not seek to dismiss the real differences it has made in concrete political struggles. Based on extensive archival research and ethnographic fieldwork, the book argues that the problem of recognition rests not in the inability of the survivor to communicate but in our inability to listen and take responsibility for the injustice before us.

GENERE
Politica e attualità
PUBBLICATO
2011
29 novembre
LINGUA
EN
Inglese
PAGINE
232
EDITORE
University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
DIMENSIONE
1,1
MB

Altri libri di Tobias Kelly

Battles of Conscience Battles of Conscience
2022
The Clinic and the Court The Clinic and the Court
2015
Are Human Rights for Migrants? Are Human Rights for Migrants?
2011