Beyond
Terror
Price: $23.95
Subtitle: Gender, Narrative, Human
Rights
Author: Elizabeth Swanson Goldberg
Subject: Film / Human Rights
Paper ISBN 978-0-8135-4061-0
Cloth ISBN 978-0-8135-4060-3
Pages: 272 pages. 5 b&w
illustrations
Publication Date: September 2007
Series: New
Directions in International Studies
Description:
In traditional narrative contexts-legal, psychoanalytic, and
documentary-the ethics of representing violations of human rights are
widely acknowledged. But what are the principles that guide the
creation and dissemination of historically based fictional narratives?
Are such representations capable of shaping, changing, or even
effectively depicting "real" human atrocities? How do existing ideas
about gender influence the way these narratives are written and
perceived?
In Beyond Terror , Elizabeth Swanson Goldberg
argues that after human rights violations have occurred, the realm of
representation-actual and fictional-is precisely the ground
upon which struggles for justice and peace are waged in legal,
emotional, and cultural terms. Moving beyond the myriad of fictional
accounts that have portrayed the carnage of World War II, the
Holocaust, and the Vietnam War, Goldberg focuses on emerging narratives
about recent abuses, including those in South Africa, Rwanda, and Iraq.
Through the lens of literary, feminist, and human rights
theory, this important book examines the meaning and influence of films
such as Cry Freedom, Three Kings, and Salvador ,
and novels such as Gil Courtemanche's A Sunday at the Pool in
Kigali , Pat Barker's Double Vision , and Edwidge
Danticat's The Farming of Bones .
About the Author:
Elizabeth Swanson Goldberg is an assistant
professor of English at Babson College in Wellesley, Massachusetts.
A volume in the New Directions in International Studies
series, edited by Patrice Petro
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Price: $23.95
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