Militarizing Sri Lanka : popular culture, memory and narrative in the armed conflict
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Militarizing Sri Lanka : popular culture, memory and narrative in the armed conflict
SAGE Publications, 2007
- : pbk
Available at / 2 libraries
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Library, Institute of Developing Economies, Japan External Trade Organization図
: pbkASCE||323.2||M117151572
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [296]-318) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Militarizing Sri Lanka is a study of the militarization that has buttressed the war between the Sri Lankan state and the LTTE for over two decades. It highlights militarization as a process through which the ideology of militarism is shaped and shared in a manner that makes militant solutions to conflict a part of institutional structures and ways of thought. It foregrounds militarization as activity and agency, capable of adaptation and transforming society in significant ways; and as a deeply gendered, contingent and shifting process. It also analyzes both the construction and resistance to militarization and militarism, but in a manner that draws attention to their relationality rather than as self-evidently oppositional categories.
Through case studies of military advertising, disabled soldiers, children in the conflict zones, the LTTE female suicide bomber, censorship, the archive and feminist work, Militarizing Sri Lanka also foregrounds the crucial role of popular culture, memory and narrative in how attitudes to militarism, the war, and peace are mediated.
This book is a valuable resource for social and political scientists and activists, and all those wanting an insight into militarization in the Sri Lankan context from the late 1980s to 2006.
Table of Contents
Constituting Martial Virtue: The Processes of Militarization in Sri Lanka
Marketing War, Marketing Peace: Mediating Global Capital and National Security
Staging Pain: The Disabled Soldier and the Butterflies Theatre
Allegories of War: The Politics of Childhood, Mourning and Melancholia in the Tales of the Butterfly Peace Garden
Figure of Speech: The Female Suicide Bomber, Censorship and the Literary-Cinematic Site
The Promise of the Archive: Memory, Testimony and Feminist Domains
Bibliography
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"