Unsettling Accounts Unsettling Accounts

Unsettling Accounts

Neither Truth nor Reconciliation in Confessions of State Violence

    • 24,99 €
    • 24,99 €

Publisher Description

An Argentine naval officer remorsefully admits that he killed thirty people during Argentina’s Dirty War. A member of General Augusto Pinochet’s intelligence service reveals on a television show that he took sadistic pleasure in the sexual torture of women in clandestine prisons. A Brazilian military officer draws on his own experiences to write a novel describing the military’s involvement in a massacre during the 1970s. The head of a police death squad refuses to become the scapegoat for apartheid-era violence in South Africa; he begins to name names and provide details of past atrocities to the Truth Commission. Focusing on these and other confessions to acts of authoritarian state violence, Leigh A. Payne asks what happens when perpetrators publicly admit or discuss their actions. While mechanisms such as South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission are touted as means of settling accounts with the past, Payne contends that public confessions do not settle the past. They are unsettling by nature. Rather than reconcile past violence, they catalyze contentious debate. She argues that this debate—and the public confessions that trigger it—are healthy for democratic processes of political participation, freedom of expression, and the contestation of political ideas.Payne draws on interviews, unedited television film, newspaper archives, and books written by perpetrators to analyze confessions of state violence in Argentina, Chile, Brazil, and South Africa. Each of these four countries addressed its past through a different institutional form—from blanket amnesty, to conditional amnesty based on confessions, to judicial trials. Payne considers perpetrators’ confessions as performance, examining what they say and what they communicate nonverbally; the timing, setting, and reception of their confessions; and the different ways that they portray their pasts, whether in terms of remorse, heroism, denial, or sadism, or through lies or betrayal.

  • GENRE
    Politics & Current Affairs
    RELEASED
    2008
    11 January
    LANGUAGE
    EN
    English
    LENGTH
    392
    Pages
    PUBLISHER
    Duke University Press
    SIZE
    4.3
    MB

    More Books by Leigh A. Payne

    Transitional Justice and Corporate Accountability from Below Transitional Justice and Corporate Accountability from Below
    2020
    El resurgir del pasado en España El resurgir del pasado en España
    2018
    Revealing New Truths about Spain's Violent Past Revealing New Truths about Spain's Violent Past
    2016
    Amnesty in the Age of Human Rights Accountability Amnesty in the Age of Human Rights Accountability
    2012
    Accounting for Violence Accounting for Violence
    2011