Fr. 240.40

A New Philosophy of Social Conflict - Mediating Collective Trauma and Transitional Justice

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor LeonardC. Hawes is Professor of Communication and Cultural Studies and Director ofPeace & Conflict Studies in the College of Humanities at the University ofUtah, USA. Klappentext A New Philosophy of Social Conflict joins in the contemporary conflict resolution and transitional justice debates by contributing a Deleuze-Guattarian reading of the post-genocide justice and reconciliation experiment in Rwanda -the Gacaca courts. In doing so! Hawes addresses two significant problems for which the work of Deleuze and Guattari provides invaluable insight: how to live ethically with the consequences of conflict and trauma and how to negotiate the chaos of living through trauma! in ways that create self-organizing! discursive processes for resolving and reconciling these ontological dilemmas in life-affirming ways. Hawes draws on Deleuze-Guattarian thinking to create new concepts that enable us to think more productively and to live more ethically in a world increasingly characterized by sociocultural trauma and conflict! and to imagine alternative ways of resolving and reconciling trauma and conflict. Zusammenfassung A New Philosophy of Social Conflict joins in the contemporary conflict resolution and transitional justice debates by contributing a Deleuze-Guattarian reading of the post-genocide justice and reconciliation experiment in Rwanda -the Gacaca courts. In doing so, Hawes addresses two significant problems for which the work of Deleuze and Guattari provides invaluable insight: how to live ethically with the consequences of conflict and trauma and how to negotiate the chaos of living through trauma, in ways that create self-organizing, discursive processes for resolving and reconciling these ontological dilemmas in life-affirming ways. Hawes draws on Deleuze-Guattarian thinking to create new concepts that enable us to think more productively and to live more ethically in a world increasingly characterized by sociocultural trauma and conflict, and to imagine alternative ways of resolving and reconciling trauma and conflict. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction 1. Conflict Theory and Transitional Justice 2. Intuiting Attunement to Duration 3.Becoming-Conflict, Chaos andTrauma 4. Minor Communication, Regimes of Signs, and Conversing Machines 5. Desiring-Utterances and Eternal Return 6. Embodied Desire, Subjectificationsand Subjectivations Bibliography Index ...

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