Violence, Torture and Memory in Sri Lanka

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A01=Dhana Hughes
Author_Dhana Hughes
Bad Karma
Buddhist Ethics
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Counter-insurgency Officers
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Gellately 1997a
insurgents
insurrectionary
intimate
Intimate Relationships
Intimate Social Worlds
jvp
Karmic Consequences
LTTE
militants
Moral Repair
Moral Reparation
Negative Karmic Consequences
Normative Moral Values
Past Violence
pasts
Redemptive Discourse
Rehabilitation Centre
Sinhala Buddhist
Sinhala People
social
Sri Lankan
tamil
Tamil Militant
Torture Survivors
Unp Regime
Vice Versa
violent
worlds
Young Men
Youth Unrest

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415532105
  • Weight: 540g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 23 Jul 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Drawing on original ethnographic field-research conducted primarily with former guerrilla insurgents in southern and central Sri Lanka, this book analyses the memories and narratives of people who have perpetrated political violence. It explores how violence is negotiated and lived with in the aftermath, and its implications for the self and social relationships from the perspectives of those who have inflicted it.

The book sheds ethnographic light on a largely overlooked and little-understood conflict that took place within the majority Sinhala community in the late 1980s, known locally as the Terror (Bheeshanaya). It illuminates the ways in which the ethical charge carried by violence seeps into the fabric of life in the aftermath, and discusses that for those who have perpetrated violence, the mediation of its memory is ethically tendentious and steeped in the moral, carrying important implications for notions of the self and for the negotiation of sociality in the present.

Providing an important understanding of the motivations, meanings, and consequences of violence, the book is of interest to students and scholars of South Asia, Political Science, Trauma Studies and War Studies.

Dhana Hughes is an anthropologist at the University of Oxford, UK.

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