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Spiritual Contestations – The Violence of Peace in South Sudan (Paperback)
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Spiritual Contestations – The Violence of Peace in South Sudan (Paperback)
Series: Religion in Transforming Africa
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A fresh perspective on conflict and peace-making that highlights
the cosmologies and invisible entities that state, society and
religious authorities draw on to claim or reclaim legitimacy and
control. Peace-making can be a violent, arbitrary assertion of
power. At the same time, the spheres of power, politics and
religion are rarely discrete: when governments behave like gods
through demonstrations of arbitrary violence, the remaking of moral
and spiritual worlds can provide radical ways to contest the
brutality of both conflict and peace. This book is an exploration
of the way that Nuer- and Dinka-speaking communities living around
the Bilnyang and connected river systems in Warrap and Unity States
in South Sudan have experienced peace-making and conflict in an
increasingly militarized South Sudan. The book traces patterns of
violence in peace-making back to colonial and mercantile activities
in the late 19th century, but focuses on the period since the
1980s. Challenging dominant understandings of conflict and peace
centred on neo-liberal brokerage and settlements or a politics
entirely driven by instrumentalist, neo-patrimonial, marketized
logics, this book shows how South Sudanese authorities,
particularly religious authorities, have contested the legitimacy
of violence and peace by drawing on divinely inspired notions of
authority and norms of conduct. Drawing on archive, ethnographic
and oral history research, as well as participant observations of
the elite peace negotiations since 2013, Pendle describes the
peace-making efforts of a range of actors from international
diplomats to chiefs, Nuer prophets and local priests, to show how
peace-making in South Sudan became an instrument used by actors to
build authority by reshaping rituals, remaking hierarchies and
re-encoding moral protest against oppressive regimes. By recasting
anthropological and historical scholarship on divine authorities
and moral communities in South Sudan, this book brings a new
perspective to conflict, peace and governance that will be
invaluable not only to scholars but to policymakers, practitioners
and NGOs. This book is available as Open Access under the Creative
Commons license CC-BY-NC.
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