Radical Conflict

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A32=Abdullahi Ahmed An-Na'im
A32=Anna Klyukanova
A32=Donald G. Ellis
A32=Hamdi Echkaou
A32=Jason Hannan
A32=Rebecca J. Welch Cline
A32=Said Graiouid
A32=Taieb Belghazi
A32=Tanis Hernandez
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agonistic discourse
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B01=Andrew R. Smith
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=DNF
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Category=GTJ
Category=GTU
Category=JPS
Category=JPWL
COP=United States
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democratization
digital jury
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ethnopolitical conflict
Language_English
media
mediation
narrative violence
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radical conflict
repatriation
rights
social suffering
softlaunch
superordinate goals
violation
Violence
Warfare

Product details

  • ISBN 9781498521772
  • Weight: 630g
  • Dimensions: 165 x 236mm
  • Publication Date: 05 May 2016
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing Plc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Radical Conflictaddresses conflict at interpersonal and communal, legal and rhetorical, ethnopolitical, global, and geopolitical levels. The conflicts analyzed are "radical" because in each some intense and often prolonged violence takes place. The chapters address different kinds of violence(s)—physical and gratuitous, structural and socio-economic, legal and symbolic, all with significant ill effects and injustices that spiral in all directions. All share an interest in exploring imaginatively and speculatively what can be done to attenuate such cycles of violence. The volume analyzes how recurrent narratives, mythologies, media(ted) constructions and other discourse(s) of liberal democratic and authoritarian states play a significant role in exacerbating or thwarting violence, exposing, escalating, legitimizing, rationalizing, propagating, but also possibly mitigating violence in all of its forms.

Each contributor provides a critical interpretation of the status of the conflict under inquiry, including: a teacher verbally abusing and ridiculing a student then exposing it in social media; a community torn apart by environmental disaster; the incommensurate but not incommensurable conflict between Israelis and Palestinians; the Muslim Brotherhood and the militarized state(s) of Egypt and Libya; urban discourses in cyberspace among Moroccan and Maghreb youth that have become counter-signifying publics against oppression of the state; the role of media and violence in Zimbabwe's political struggle; the impact of the Circassian diaspora in global politics especially in the United States; India's soft power approach to the Kashmir conflict as a way to capitalize on it through tourism; the agonistic discourses that pervade the conflict over the Sahara and deprive Sahrawi people of rights; and how the liberal state is implicated in the gratuitous violence of ISIL.

The volume also offers a section on the rhetoric of exclusionary laws associated with intractable conflicts of the abortion conflict, the right to die controversy, and a Burkean perspective on violence in Bangladesh. Contributors suggest what can be done conceptually and politically to mitigate and end violations of those who are most vulnerable, banished, forgotten, damaged, and often silenced.

Andrew R. Smith is professor and graduate program head in the Department of Communication Studies at Edinboro University.