Fr. 235.00

Political Violence in Southeast Asia Since 1945 - Case Studies From Six Countries

English · Hardback

New edition in preparation, currently unavailable

Description

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List of contents

Introduction Part 1: Dimensions of Mass Violence 1. A Time to Kill: The Anti-Communist Violence in Indonesia, 1965-66 2. Expulsion or Incorporation: Valences of Mass Violence in Myanmar Part 2: The Politics of Fear 3. Performative Violence and Philippine Populism 4. The Political Organization of Genocide: Central Orders and Regional Implementation under the Khmer Rouge 5. Violence against the Rohingya: Strategic and Ideological Drivers of Ethnic Cleansing Part 3: Minorities and the State 6. The Crucible of Điện Biên Phủ: Making Vietnam in the First Indochina War 7. The Khmer Republic’s Mass Persecution of the Vietnamese Minority in Cambodia, 1970-75 8. The Genocide of Rohingyas in Burma Part 4: Technologies, Techniques, and Ideologies 9. The Air War in Vietnam: Responses to the Machinery of Mass Violence 10. Medical Experiments, Blood and Gall: Revolutionary Utilization of the Body in Khmer Rouge Prisons Part 5: Justice, Ethics, and History 11. Assessing Genocidal Intent in the Context of Myanmar’s Rohingya 12. Justice after Dictatorship in Thailand 13. Investigating Genocide: Rithy Panh’s “S-21” (2004) 14. Vietnam, ASEAN, the Great Powers, and the Challenges of Learning from the Cambodian Genocide Part 6: The Shadow of the Past on the Present 15. The Mobilization of State-Sponsored Mass Organizations Since the 2006 Coup in Thailand 16. Something in the Water: Towards a Symbolic History of Otherness in Chrouy Changvar, Cambodia 17. Mass Violence and Mob Violence in Cambodia: Responses and Social Repair – Hope for the Future?

About the author

Eve Monique Zucker is a lecturer in anthropology at Yale University, US. Her research focuses on the social, moral, and digital dimensions of remembrance and recovery after mass atrocities in Southeast Asia and beyond. Her books include Forest of Struggle: Moralities of Remembrance in Upland Cambodia; Mass Violence and Memory in the Digital Age; and Coexistence in the Aftermath of Mass Violence.
Ben Kiernan is the A. Whitney Griswold Professor of History and founding Director (1994–2015) of the Genocide Studies Program at Yale University, US. His books include How Pol Pot Came to Power; The Pol Pot Regime; Blood and Soil; Genocide and Resistance in Southeast Asia; and Việt Nam.

Summary

This book examines postwar waves of political violence that affected six Southeast Asian countries—Indonesia, Burma/Myanmar, Cambodia, Thailand, the Philippines, and Vietnam—from the wars of independence in the mid-20th century to the recent Rohingya genocide. The book raises key questions for the study of mass violence worldwide.

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