“An important intervention into transitional justice scholarship. Kent interrupts established narratives and problematizes assumptions about victims and their temporal location in the past. Convincing, persuasive, and eminently readable.”—Caroline Bennett, University of Sussex “Paying close attention to how the dead make claims on life and the political community in the aftermath of devastating violence, Kent offers a profound and compelling ethnography of how, in responding, Timorese survivors escape official necro-governmental projects and attempt on their own to<i> re</i>-member their dead through everyday technologies of truth and self.”—Isaias Rojas-Perez, author of <i>Mourning Remains: State Atrocity, Exhumations, and Governing the Disappeared in Peru’s Postwar Andes</i>