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Vulnerability and Security in Human Rights Literature and Visual Culture (Paperback)
Loot Price: R1,277
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Vulnerability and Security in Human Rights Literature and Visual Culture (Paperback)
Series: Routledge Interdisciplinary Perspectives on Literature
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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This book responds to the failures of human rights-the way its
institutions and norms reproduce geopolitical imbalances and social
exclusions-through an analysis of how literary and visual culture
can make visible human rights claims that are foreclosed in
official discourses. Moore draws on theories of vulnerability,
precarity, and dispossession to argue for the necessity of
recognizing the embodied and material contexts of human rights
subjects. At the same time, she demonstrates how these theories run
the risk of reproducing the structural imbalances that lie at the
core of critiques of human rights. Pairing conventional human
rights genres-legal instruments, human rights reports, reportage,
and humanitarian campaigns-with literary and visual culture, Moore
develops a transnational feminist reading praxis of five sites of
rights and their violation over the past fifty years: UN human
rights instruments and child soldiers in Nigerian literature; human
rights reporting and novels that address state-sponsored ethnocide
in Zimbabwe; the international humanitarian campaigns and disaster
capitalism in fiction of Bhopal, India; the work of Medecins Sans
Frontieres in the Sahel, Afghanistan, Democratic Republic of Congo,
and Burma as represented in various media campaigns and in
photo/graphic narratives; and, finally, the human rights campaigns,
fiction, and film that have brought Indonesia's history of
anti-leftist violence into contemporary public debate. These case
studies underscore how human rights norms are always subject to
conditions of imaginative representation, and how literature and
visual culture participate in that cultural imaginary. Expanding
feminist theories of embodied and imposed vulnerability, Moore
demonstrates the importance of situating human rights violations
not only in the context of neo-liberal development policies but
also in relation to the growth of security networks that serve the
nation-state often at the expense of th
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