Bibliographic Information

Human rights and memory

Daniel Levy and Natan Sznaider

(Essays on human rights / edited by Thomas Cushman)

Pennsylvania State University Press, c2010

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Note

Includes bibliographical references (p. [157]-171) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Memories of historical events like the Holocaust have played a key role in the internationalization of human rights. Their importance lies in their ability to bridge the universal and the particular-the universality of human values and the particularity of memories rooted in local human experiences. In Human Rights and Memory, Levy and Sznaider trace the growth of human rights discourse since World War II and interpret its deployment of memories as a new form of cosmopolitanism, exemplifying a dynamic through which global concerns become part of local experiences, and vice versa.

Table of Contents

Contents Acknowledgments 1. The Ubiquity of Human Rights in a Cosmopolitan Age 2. Sociology and Human Rights 3. Sovereignty and Human Rights: The Hobbesian Challenge 4. International Law and the Formation of Nation-States 5. From Minority to Human: The Changing Face of Rights 6. The Cold War Period: More Than One Universalism 7. The Post-Cold War Period: Globalization and the Cosmopolitan Turn 8. Human Rights and the Clash of Memories: The Politics of Forgiveness 9 East Meets West: Europe and Its Others 10. A Sociology of Human Rights and Sovereignty After 9/11 Notes References Index

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