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Informationen zum Autor Edited by Suvendrini Perera and Sherene H. Razack Klappentext In At the Limits of Justice, twenty-nine contributors from six countries examine the political, social, and personal repercussions of the war on terror. Zusammenfassung In At the Limits of Justice! twenty-nine contributors from six countries examine the political! social! and personal repercussions of the war on terror. Inhaltsverzeichnis List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction: At the Limits of Justice: Women of Colour on Terror (Suvendrini Perera and Sherene H. Razack) Section One: Mundane Terror/(Un)Liveable Lives Ch. 1: Introduction (Laura Kwak) Ch. 2: Violence and Terror in a Colonized Country: Canada’s Indian Residential School System (Robina Thomas) Ch. 3: Terrorism and the Birthing Body in Jerusalem (Nadera Shalhoub Kevorkian) Ch. 4: The Manufacture of Torture as Public Truth: The Case of Omar Khadr (Sherene H. Razack) Ch. 5: Surveillance Effects: South Asian, Arab, and Afghan American Youth in the War on Terror (Sunaina Maira) Ch. 6: The Biopolitics of Christian Persecution (Andrea Smith) Section Two: Violence in a Far Country: Other Women’s Lives Ch.7: Introduction (Roshan Jahangeer & Shaira Vadasaria) Ch. 8: "Collateral violence": Women Rights and National Security in Pakistan's War on Terror (Amina Jamal) Ch. 9: “Outsourcing Patriarchy: Feminist Encounters, transnational mediations and the crime of "Honor killings" (Inderpal Grewal) Ch. 10: Diasporas of Empire: Arab Americans and the Reverberations of War (Nadine Naber) Ch. 11: Sovereignty, War on Terror and Violence against Women (Meyda Yegenoglu) Section Three: Terror and the Limits of Remembering Ch. 12: Introduction (Kendra-Ann Pitt) Ch. 13: “Weeping is Singing”: After War, a Transnational Lament (Merlinda Bobis) Ch. 14: Gone but not Forgotten: Memorial Murals, Vigils and the Politics of Popular Commemoration in Jamaica (Honor Ford Smith) Ch. 15: “Lest We Forget”: Terror and the Politics of Commemoration in Guyana (Alissa Trotz) Ch. 16: “Tortured Bodies”: The Biopolitics of Torture and Truth in Chile (Teresa Macias) Section Four: Thinking Humanitarianism/Thinking Terror Ch. 17: Introduction (Gulzar R. Charania) Ch. 18: From the Northern Territory Emergency Response to Stronger Futures – Where is the Evidence that Australian Aboriginal Women are Leading Self-Determining Lives? (Nicole Watson) Ch. 19: Power In/Through Speaking of Terror: The Geopolitics and Anti-Politics of Discourses on Violence in Other Places (Sedef Arat-Koç) Ch. 20: Africa, 9/11 and the Temporality and Spatiality of Race and Terror (Malinda S Smith) Ch. 21: Humanitarianism as Planetary Politics (Miriam Ticktin) Section Five: Terror Circuits Ch. 22: Introduction (Hena Tyyebi) Ch. 23: Visual Colonial Economies and Slave Death in Modernity: Bin Laden’s Terror? (Anna M. Agathangelou) Ch. 24: Viewing Violence in a Far Country: Abu Ghraib and Terror’s New Performativities (Suvendrini Perera) Ch. 25: Fighting Terror: Race, Sex and the Monstrosity of Islam (Sunera Thobani) Section Six: Theorizing (at) the Limits of Justice Ch. 26: Introduction (Nashwa Salem) Ch. 27: In Terror, In Love, Out of Time (Asma Abbas) Ch. 28: Radical Praxis or Knowing (at) the Limits of Justice (Denise Ferreira da Silva) Ch. 29: Unsewing My Lips, Breathing my Voice: The Spoken and Unspoken Truth of Transnational Violence (Omeima Sukkarieh) Ch. 30: Mori Cards: The Body Bags Installation (Omeima Sukkarieh) Bibliography List of Contributors ...