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  3. Annihilating difference: the anthropology of genocide

Annihilating difference: the anthropology of genocide

Alexander Laban Hinton
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  • Contents

  • Reviews

  • Cover
  • Frontmatter
  • LIST OF FIGURES AND TABLES (page vii)
  • FOREWARD (page ix)
  • ACKNOWLEDGMENTS (page xiii)
  • 1. The Dark Side of Modernity: Toward an Anthropology of Genocide (Alexander Laban Hinton, page 1)
  • PART ONE. MODERNITY'S EDGES: GENOCIDE AND INDIGENOUS PEOPLES
  • 2. Genocide against Indigenous Peoples (David Maybury-Lewis, page 43)
  • 3. Confronting Genocide and Ethnocide of Indigenous Peoples: An Interdisciplinary Approach to Definition, Intervention, Prevention, and Advocacy (Samuel Totten, William S. Parsons, and Robert K. Hitchcock, page 54)
  • PART TWO. ESSENTIALIZING DIFFERENCE: ANTHROPOLOGISTS IN THE HOLOCAUST
  • 4. Justifying Genocide: Archaeology and the Construction of Difference (Bettina Arnold, page 95)
  • 5. Scientific Racism in Service of the Reich: German Anthropologists in the Nazi Era (Gretchen E. Schafft, page 117)
  • PART THREE. ANNIHILATING DIFFERENCE: LOCAL DIMENSIONS OF GENOCIDE
  • 6. The Cultural Face of Terror in the Rwandan Genocide of 1994 (Christopher C. Taylor, page 137)
  • 7. Dance, Music, and the Nature of Terror in Democratic Kampuchea (Toni Shapiro-Phim, page 179)
  • 8. Averted Gaze: Genocide in Bosnia-Herzegovina, 1992-1995 (Tone Bringa, page 194)
  • PART FOUR. GENOCIDE'S WAKE: TRAUMA, MEMORY, COPING, AND RENEWAL
  • 9. Archives of Violence: The Holocaust and the German Politics of Memory (Uli Linke, page 229)
  • 10. Aftermaths of Genocide: Cambodian Villagers (May Ebihara and Judy Ledgerwood, page 272)
  • 11. Terror, Grief, and Recovery: Genocidal Trauma in a Mayan Village in Guatemala (Beatriz Manz, page 292)
  • 12. Recent Developments in the International Law of Genocide: An Anthropological Perspective on the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (Paul J. Magnarella, page 310)
  • PART FIVE. CRITICAL REFLECTIONS: ANTHROPOLOGY AND THE STUDY OF GENOCIDE
  • 13. Inoculations of Evil in the U.S.-Mexican Border Region: Reflections on the Genocidal Potential of Symbolic Violence (Carole Nagengast, page 325)
  • 14. Coming to our Senses: Anthropology and Genocide (Nancy Scheper-Hughes, page 348)
  • 15. Culture, Genocide, and a Public Anthropology (John R. Bowen, page 382)
  • LIST OF CONTRIBUTORS (page 397)
  • INDEX (page 401)
Reviews
Journal AbbreviationLabelURL
HGS 18.1 (Spring. 2004): 133-135 https://muse.jhu.edu/article/168438
AQ 77.1 (Winter. 2004): 187-189 https://muse.jhu.edu/article/52200
AANTH 106.2 (Jun. 2004): 398-400 http://www.jstor.org/stable/3566981
Citable Link
Published: c2002
Publisher: University of California Press
ISBN(s)
  • 9780520927575 (ebook)
  • 9780520230286 (hardcover)
  • 9780520230293 (paper)
Subject
  • Anthropology
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