We regard genocidal violence as worse than other sorts of violence—perhaps the worst there is. But what does this say about what we value about the genos on which nations are said to be founded? This is an urgent question for democracies. We value the mode of being in time that anchors us in the past and in the future, that is, among those who have been and those who might yet be. If the genos is a group constituted by this generational time, the demos was invented as the anti-genos, with no criterion of inheritance and instead only occurring according to the interruption of revolutionary time. Insofar as the demos persists, we experience it as a sort of genos, for example, the democratic nation state. As a result, democracies are caught is a bind, disavowing genos-thinking while cherishing the temporal forms of genos-life; they abhor genocidal violence but perpetuate and disguise it. This is the genocide paradox. O’Byrne traces the problem through our commitment to existential categories from Aristotle to the life taxonomies of Linneaus and Darwin, through anthropologies of kinship that tether us to the social world, the shortfalls of ethical theory, into the history of democratic theory and the defensive tactics used by real existing democracies when it came to defining genocide for the U.N. Genocide Convention. She argues that, although models of democracy all make room for contestation, they fail to grasp its generational structure or acknowledge the generational content of our lives. They cultivate ignorance of the contingency and precarity of the relations that create and sustain us. The danger of doing so is immense. It leaves us unprepared for confronting democracy’s deficits and its struggle to entertain multiple temporalities. In addition, it leaves us unprepared for understanding the relation between demos and violence, and the ability of good enough citizens to tolerate the slow-burning destruction of marginalized peoples. What will it take to envision an anti-genocidal democracy?
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Democracies abhor genocide and yet they perpetrate their own genocidal violence and then fail to acknowledge it. Drawing on the history of biological taxonomies, anthropological studies of kinship, and radical democratic theory, this work studies the root of the problem in the paradoxes of democratic inheritance and revolution, asking: What will it take to envision an anti-genocidal democracy?
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Introduction: Democracy and Genos | 1 Generational Being, 10 • Genocidal Violence, 18 • Ontology and Judgment—On Method, 23 • A Note on Genos, 31 1 Genos | 33 Introduction, 33 • The Tree of Porphyry: The Pleasure of Order, 36 • Linnaeus: The Sane Systematizer, 40 • Darwin: Heredity and the Temporal Order, 48 • The Unstable Clade and the Naturalization of Generational Being, 57 2 How Much Kin Does a Person Need? | 64 Introduction, 64 • Absolute Belonging: Atavus and Beyond, 64 • The Life of Blood, 73 • The Evidence of DNA, 77 • Genealogical Th inking, 81 • Creating Kin, 93 • Genocide as Aenocide, 98 3 What’s Wrong with Genocide? | 103 Introduction, 103 • Genocide and the End of Ethics, 107 • Genocide beyond the End of Ethics, 114 • Genocidal Life: The Case of Sexual Violence, 117 • Ontology and Politics, 119 4 Democracy of Generational Beings | 126 The Democratic Paradox and the Genocide Paradox, 126 • Genos and Cosmos, 131 • Genos and Demos, 136 • The Problem of Time for Democracies, 141 Conclusion: The Antigenocidal Democracy | 151 Acknowledgments | 165 Notes | 167 Bibliography | 203 Index | 221
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The Genocide Paradox is perceptive and powerfully suggestive. Bringing together democratic politics, time, and genocide, it illuminates troubling historical events with philosophical insights about the human condition, specifically the struggle to reconcile ourselves to a world of becoming when dependence on the past and uncertainty about the future are experienced as existential threats. A humane, thoughtful, creative work.
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781531503253
Publisert
2023-04-25
Utgiver
Vendor
Fordham University Press
Høyde
229 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Anne O’Byrne is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Stony Brook University. She is the author of Natality and Finitude (Indiana, 2010), coeditor of Logics of Genocide (Routledge, 2020), and translator or cotranslator of four books by Jean-Luc Nancy.