<p>âDiane Ennsâs book <i>The Violence of Victimhood</i> will be read with admiration and a passionate interest by anyone who confronts the moral, philosophical, and political dilemmas of extreme violence in contemporary society: scholars, activists, citizens. Instead of simply naming the ambivalence of the category of victimhood, she wants to understand it in all its determinations, moral and historical. She confronts with great rigor an impressive corpus of interpretations, past and present, Western and postcolonial. She delineates a politics of life with no concession to wishful thinking. A most necessary, most timely book.â</p><p>âEtienne Balibar, University of California, Irvine</p>
<p>âDiane Enns powerfully shows how easily we can lapse into misleading and dangerous assumptions about the entitlements and authority of victims. While seeking to respect and repair the victims of violence, we may defer too much, with damaging consequences. This beautifully written and thoughtful book poses central questions about conflict and its aftermath.â</p><p>âTrudy Govier, University of Lethbridge</p>
<p>â<i>The Violence of Victimhood</i> is original in its question and extremely well researched. The discussion of widely held and largely unexamined claims regarding the moral status of the other, of trauma, of victims, of powerlessness, and so on is very fresh and insightful. . . . The breadth and depth of the research is astounding. Diane Enns knows all the secondary literature and brings it fruitfully to bear without losing her own original voice.â</p><p>âPeg Birmingham, DePaul University</p>
<p>âThe most original feature of this book . . . is the way that Diane Enns interprets and uses Arendt's writings on judgment and violence as a corrective to some of the secondary literature in the continental tradition. Furthermore, her careful reading of Fanon indicates both the weaknesses of some of his writings (and interpretations of it) and his own criticism of "counter-violence" as a political theory. Enns applies this body of literature to the analysis of civil war and genocide, in particular the problem of child soldiers, and her treatment of the Palestinian-Israeli conflict is excellent, revealing the limitations of the dominant thematizations of the violence that has defined it.â</p><p>âStephen Esquith, Michigan State University</p>
<p>âThis is an important book. It is an urgent book. In language at once analytic and passionate, Diane Enns confronts the cult of âothernessââwithout denying the truths to which it pointsâand substitutes for it a universal ethic of nonviolent action, without denying the complexities it involves. For those seeking building blocks for solidarity in our age, <i>The Violence of Victimhood</i> is an essential read.â</p><p>âTodd May, Clemson University</p>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Diane Enns is Associate Professor of Philosophy at McMaster University.