Peaceful selves : personhood, nationhood, and the post-conflict moment in Rwanda
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Peaceful selves : personhood, nationhood, and the post-conflict moment in Rwanda
Berghahn, 2018
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [169]-181) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This ethnography of personhood in post-genocide Rwanda investigates how residents of a small town grapple with what kinds of persons they ought to become in the wake of violence. Based on fieldwork carried out over the course of a decade, it uncovers how conflicting moral demands emerge from the 1994 genocide, from cultural contradictions around “good” personhood, and from both state and popular visions for the future. What emerges is a profound dissonance in town residents’ selfhood. While they strive to be agents of change who can catalyze a new era of modern Rwandan nationhood, they are also devastated by the genocide and struggle to recover a sense of selfhood and belonging in the absence of kin, friends, and neighbors. In drawing out the contradictions at the heart of self-making and social life in contemporary Rwanda, this book asserts a novel argument about the ordinary lives caught in global post-conflict imperatives to remember and to forget, to mourn and to prosper.
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: Person, Nation, and Violence in Rwanda
Chapter 1. The Post-Conflict Moment in Butare and its Antecedents
Chapter 2. Ethnicity’s Specter in Post-Ethnic Times
Chapter 3. Living with Absence
Chapter 4. Creativity, Positive Thinking, and Their Perils
Chapter 5. Making Peace by Remaking Persons
Conclusion: The Post-conflict, the Postcolonial, and Peaceful Selves
Glossary
Bibliography
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"