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Humanitarian Violence - The U.S. Deployment of Diversity (Paperback)
Loot Price: R637
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Humanitarian Violence - The U.S. Deployment of Diversity (Paperback)
Series: Difference Incorporated
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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When is a war not a war? When it is undertaken in the name of
democracy, against the forces of racism, sexism, and religious and
political persecution? This is the new world of warfare that Neda
Atanasoski observes in Humanitarian Violence, different in name
from the old imperialism but not so different in kind. In
particular, she considers U.S. militarism—humanitarian
militarism—during the Vietnam War, the Soviet-Afghan War, and the
1990s wars of secession in the former Yugoslavia. What this book
brings to light—through novels, travel narratives,
photojournalism, films, news media, and political rhetoric—is in
fact a system of postsocialist imperialism based on humanitarian
ethics. In the fiction of the United States as a multicultural
haven, which morally underwrites the nation’s equally brutal
waging of war and making of peace, parts of the world are subject
to the violence of U.S. power because they are portrayed to be
homogeneous and racially, religiously, and sexually
intolerant—and thus permanently in need of reform. The entangled
notions of humanity and atrocity that follow from such mediations
of war and crisis have refigured conceptions of racial and
religious freedom in the post–Cold War era. The resulting
cultural narratives, Atanasoski suggests, tend to racialize
ideological differences—whereas previous forms of imperialism
racialized bodies. In place of the European racial imperialism,
U.S. settler colonialism, and pre–civil rights racial
constructions that associated racial difference with a devaluing of
nonwhite bodies, Humanitarian Violence identifies an emerging
discourse of race that focuses on ideological and cultural
differences and makes postsocialist and Islamic nations the
potential targets of U.S. disciplining violence.
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