Unforgetting and the Politics of Representation

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A01=Tatjana Takeva
A01=Tatjana Takseva
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Author_Tatjana Takeva
Author_Tatjana Takseva
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Balkan war
Bosnia and Herzegovina
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=GPS
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Category=GTJ
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Category=GTU
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ethnic identity narratives
ethnicity
feminist autoethnography
feminist ethnography
gender
gendered violence
gendered violence research
healing
identity
interviews
Language_English
memory
monolithic
narratives
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politics of representation
post-conflict
post-conflict memory studies
Price_€100 and above
PS=Forthcoming
qualitative fieldwork Bosnia
rebuilding
reconciliation processes
sexual violence
softlaunch
survivor testimony analysis
survivors

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032029917
  • Weight: 480g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Nov 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Based on interviews and conversations in the Bosnian Federation with women survivors of war rape, children born of armed conflict, leaders of NGOs who work with survivors, and people who lived through the war and who experienced it in different ways, this book challenges one-dimensional representations of the Yugoslav war and subsequent peacebuilding processes. Relying on feminist ethnography and autoethnography, this volume offers systematic engagement with the politics of representation of Bosnia and survivors of war in post-war journalism and scholarship.

Through rich and varied individual experiences of wartime violence and recovery that go beyond simple "us" vs "them" narratives of ethnic identity and intolerance, the book shows how public and private, individual and collective discourses actively shape one another and contribute to complex forms of engagement in recovery, healing, and rebuilding. The author draws upon archival material to undermine the fetishization of ethnicity as a determining category that often underpins journalistic and scholarly accounts of post-war Bosnia. By retracing and repairing separations between individual and collective remembrance, and by complicating linear and monolithic conception of this process, the narratives in the book actively contest reductionist and instrumentalist accounts of the civil war in Bosnia.

The book will appeal to scholars across the social sciences with interest in memory, peacebuilding, national identity, gendered violence, and processes of reconciliation.

Tatjana Takševa is Professor of Women and Gender Studies and Chair of the Department of English Language and Literature at Saint Mary's University, Canada. Born and raised in the former Yugoslavia, she holds a Ph.D. from the University of Toronto (2003), and is the author of numerous essays on feminist theory, nation building and the maternal, and co-editor of Mothering Under Fire: Mothers and Mothering in Conflict Zones (2015) and Motherhood and Migration (forthcoming, 2026).

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