Everyday Revolutionaries

Regular price €81.99
A01=Irina Carlota Silber
and Disillusionment in Postwar El Salvador
antropology
Author_Irina Carlota Silber
Category=JHB
community
displacement
El Salvador
El Salvador's former war zones
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
ethics
ethnographic fieldwork
ethnography
Everyday Revolutionaries
gender
gendered experiences
Genocide
human rights
Human Rights series
immigration to the U.S
insurgency
interdisciplinary arts
interdisciplinary sciences
IRINA CARLOTA LOTTI SILBER
marginalization
political processes
Political Violence
post conflict society
postwar citizenship
postwar community
postwar disillusionment
postwar el salvador
postwar ethics
revolutionary identity
revolutionary participation
Violence
violence and disillusionment
war
war legacies
war zone

Product details

  • ISBN 9780813549347
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Dec 2010
  • Publisher: Rutgers University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Everyday Revolutionaries provides a longitudinal and rigorous analysis of the legacies of war in a community racked by political violence. By exploring political processes in one of El Salvador's former war zones-a region known for its peasant revolutionary participation-Irina Carlota Silber offers a searing portrait of the entangled aftermaths of confrontation and displacement, aftermaths that have produced continued deception and marginalization.

Silber provides one of the first rubrics for understanding and contextualizing postwar disillusionment, drawing on her ethnographic fieldwork and research on immigration to the United States by former insurgents. With an eye for gendered experiences, she unmasks how community members are asked, contradictorily and in different contexts, to relinquish their identities as "revolutionaries" and to develop a new sense of themselves as productive yet marginal postwar citizens via the same "participation" that fueled their revolutionary action. Beautifully written and offering rich stories of hope and despair, Everyday Revolutionaries contributes to important debates in public anthropology and the ethics of engaged research practices.
IRINA CARLOTA (LOTTI) SILBER is an associate professor of anthropology in the department of interdisciplinary arts and sciences at City College of New York.