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Title Truth, Silence and Violence in Emerging States : Histories of the Unspoken / edited by Aidan Russell
Published Milton : Routledge, ©2019

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Description 1 online resource (233 pages)
Series Routledge Studies in Human Rights
Routledge studies in human rights.
Contents Cover; Half Title; Series Page; Title Page; Copyright Page; Contents; List of figures; List of contributors; Acknowledgements; 1. Introduction: Regimes of silence; 2. Testimony: Silence as the cornerstone of impunity in Guatemala; 3. Constructing silence, terror, and dread: Operation Condor and state terror in Latin America; 4. Euphemism, censorship, and the vocabularies of silence in Burundi; 5. "What made the elephant rise up from the shade?" Relationships in transition and negotiating silence in Mozambique
6. "A deafening silence" and "A piece of speech": Regimes of silence in an African Counter-Insurgency7. Petitioning Saddam: Voices from the Iraqi archives; 8. The world was silent? Global communities of resistance to the 1965 repression in the Cold War era; 9. A selective silence: Leonid Brezhnev's compromise over the memory of Stalin's crimes; 10. Censorship, indifference, oblivion: The Armenian genocide and its denial; Index
Summary Around the world in the twentieth century, political violence in emerging states gave rise to different kinds of silence within their societies. This book explores the histories of these silences, how they were made, maintained, evaded, and transformed. This book gives a comprehensive view of the ongoing evolutions and multiple faces of silence as a common strand in the struggles of state-building. It begins with chapters that examine the construction of "regimes of silence" as an act of power, and it continues through explorations of the ambiguous limits of speech within communities marked by this violence. It highlights national and transnational attempts to combat state silences, before concluding with a series of considerations of how these regimes of silence continue to be extrapolated in the gaps of records and written history. This volume explores histories of the composed silences of political violence across the emerging states of the late twentieth century, not solely as a present concern of aftermath or retrospection but as a diachronic social and political dimension of violence itself. This book makes a major original contribution to international history, as well as to the study of political terror, human rights violations, social recovery, and historical memory
Notes Aidan Russell is an Assistant Professor of International History at the Graduate Institute for International and Development Studies Geneva, and a former fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge. His forthcoming monograph is entitled Politics and Violence in Burundi: The Language of Truth at the End of Empire
Print version record
Subject Political violence -- Developing countries -- History -- 20th century
State-sponsored terrorism -- Developing countries -- History -- 20th century
Collective memory -- Social aspects -- Developing countries
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- General.
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- International Relations -- Diplomacy.
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Political Freedom & Security -- International Security.
Political violence
State-sponsored terrorism
Developing countries
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
Author Russell, Aidan, 1985-
ISBN 9781351141116
1351141112
9781351141109
1351141104
9781351141123
1351141120
9781351141093
1351141090