Corporeal peacebuilding : mundane bodies and temporal transitions

Author(s)

    • Väyrynen, Tarja

Bibliographic Information

Corporeal peacebuilding : mundane bodies and temporal transitions

Tarja Väyrynen

(Rethinking peace and conflict studies)

Palgrave Macmillan, c2019

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Note

Includes bibliographical references and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book demonstrates how peace is an event that comes into being in mundane and corporeal encounters. The book brings living and experiencing, sentient body to Peace and Conflict Studies and examines war and peace as socio-political institutions that begin and end with bodies. It therefore differs from the wider field of Peace and Conflict Studies where the human body is treated as an abstract and non-living entity. The book demonstrates that conflict and violence as well as peace touch our bodies in multiple ways. Through attending to witnessing, wounded, remembering, silenced and resistant bodies, the empirical cases of the book attest to the scope and diversity of war, peace and the political of post-conflict peacebuilding. The book offers a sustained engagement with feminist social and political theory and will be of interest to academics and practitioners alike.

Table of Contents

Introduction: Corporeal Peacebuilding Thinking and Theorizing Peace: Corporeal and Mundane Dimensions Relational and Connecting Body on the Home Front Returning Body: Transferring Violence Across Time and Space Abjected and Silenced Bodies Peacebuilding as a Corporeal, Temporal and Mneumonic Site Peacebuilding in Colonial Relations Conclusions: Corporeal and Response-able Peacebuilding

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