Oral Histories of Genocide in Bosnia, Indonesia, and Rwanda

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A01=Annie Pohlman
A01=Erin Jessee
Author_Annie Pohlman
Author_Erin Jessee
Category=JP
Category=NHTD
Category=NHTZ
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eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
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forthcoming

Product details

  • ISBN 9780197782071
  • Weight: 739g
  • Dimensions: 163 x 242mm
  • Publication Date: 05 Sep 2026
  • Publisher: Oxford University Press Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Grounded in extensive oral historical, archival, and ethnographic research in the aftermaths of the Bosnian (1992-95), Indonesian (1965-66), and Rwandan (1994) genocides, this book investigates the symbolic meanings associated with spectacular forms of torture, murder, and mutilation that perpetrators devise amid genocides to punish their intended victims. Often framed as "senseless" acts of cruelty in popular culture, the stories told by the survivors, eyewitnesses, and perpetrators examined in this book instead reveal the perpetrators' intentional use of symbolic violence to torture and kill their victims, and to undermine victim communities' social vitality in long-lasting ways. Erin Jessee and Annie Pohlman explore four inter-related forms of symbolic violence: the destruction of the victim groups' cultural heritage; atrocities against children and elders; forms of humiliation, assault, and mutilation that target victims in gendered and sexualized ways; and atrocities intended to undermine the spiritual vitality of living and deceased victims. They argue that these forms of extra-lethal violence intentionally inflict social death by drawing on culturally specific symbols and tropes. The cases examined in this book show how perpetrators undermine or destroy the biological elements of victim groups through torture and killings, alongside the constituent parts of the victim group's social vitality: the historical, cultural, and social bonds that give meaning to and sustain communities.
Erin Jessee is Senior Lecturer in History at the University of Glasgow in Scotland, where she works across the War Studies, Gender History, and Global History research clusters. She is an oral historian and genocide scholar with particular interest in Rwanda and Bosnia, as well as the ethics of qualitative research with conflict-affected communities. Her work has been published in Medical History, Memory Studies, The Oral History Review, and History in Africa. She serves on the editorial boards for the Journal of Perpetrator Research, The Oral History Review, and the Oxford Oral History Series. Annie Pohlman teaches Indonesian at The University of Queensland. Her research interests include Indonesian history, comparative genocide studies, torture, gendered experiences of mass violence, and oral testimony. She is the author of Women, Sexual Violence and the Indonesian Killings of 1965-66 (2015) and the editor of several volumes on genocide studies, Asian history, and traumatic narrative. Her work is grounded in human rights activism, and she works closely with community partners in Indonesia to document state-sponsored atrocities.

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