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Memorializing Violence -

Memorializing Violence

Transnational Feminist Reflections

Alison Crosby, Heather Evans (Herausgeber)

Buch | Hardcover
224 Seiten
2025
Rutgers University Press (Verlag)
978-1-9788-4326-4 (ISBN)
CHF 199,95 inkl. MwSt
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This volume brings together feminist reflections on the transnational lives of memorializations to colonial, imperial, militarized, and state violence. It asks what’s at stake in memorializing amidst and against ongoing harm and injustice produced by white supremacist global capitalist empire.
Memorializing Violence brings together feminist and queer reflections on the transnational lives of memorialization practices, asking what it means to grapple with loss, mourning, grief, and desires to collectively remember and commemorate–as well as urges to forget–in the face of disparate yet entangled experiences of racialized and gendered colonial, imperial, militarized, and state violence. The volume uses a transnational feminist approach to ask: How do such efforts in seemingly unconnected remembrance landscapes speak to, with, and through each other in a world order inflected by colonial, imperial, and neoliberal logics, structures, and strictures? How do these memorializing initiatives not only formulate within but move through complex transnational flows and circuits, and what transpires as they do? What does it mean to inhabit loss, mourning, resistance, and refusal through memorialization at this moment, and what’s at stake in doing so? What might transnational feminist analyses of gender, race, sexuality, class, and nation have to offer in this regard?

Alison D. Crosby is associate professor in the School of Gender, Sexuality, and Women's Studies, York University, Toronto. Heather Evans is a research assistant at the Centre for Feminist Research, York University, Toronto.

Preface
Introduction: A Transnational Feminist Approach to Memorialization
Alison Crosby and Heather Evans
Chapter 1: Tracing Absent Presence
Malathi de Alwis

Part I: The Colonial, Imperial Logics of Memorializing
Chapter 2: Law’s Racial Memory  
Carmela Murdocca                                                                                        
Chapter 3: Towards a Queer Diasporic Remembrance of Air India Flight 182: Memorializing Transnational Flows of Loss and Desire
Amber Dean                                                                                                                                      

Part II: Inhabiting Loss, Exceeding the Frame  
Chapter 4: “I am Here for Justice and I am Here for Change”: Reflections on Anticolonial Remembering within the National Inquiry into Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls in Canada
Karine Duhamel
Chapter 5: Transnational Contestations: Remembering Sexual Violence in Postgenocide Guatemala
Alison Crosby, Irma Alicia Velásquez Nimatuj, and María de los Ángeles Aguilar           
Chapter 6: Poetics and Politics of Sound Memory and Social Repair in the Afterlives of Mass Violence: The Cantadoras of the Atrato River of Colombia
Pilar Riaño-Alcalá                                                     

Part III: Invoking Revolutionary Present Pasts
Chapter 7: Figures of Dissent: Women’s Memoirs of Defiance
Shahrzad Mojab
Chapter 8: Filming Disappearance: An Account of a Visual Battle
Chowra Makaremi
Chapter 9: Dialita Choir: Women Survivors Reclaiming History in Indonesia
Ayu Ratih        

Part IV: Care in/as Collective Mourning
Chapter 10: Ceremonies of Mourning, Remembrance, and Care in the Context of Violence: A Conversation about Performing Song for the Beloved
Honor Ford-Smith and Juanita Stephen
Chapter 11: Maternal Activism and the Politics of Memorialization in the Mothers of the Movement: A Black Feminist Reading
Erica S. Lawson and Ola Osman
Chapter 12: The Embroidering for Peace Initiative: Crafting Feminist Politics and Memorializing Resistance to the “War on Drugs” in Mexico
Cordelia Rizzo
Chapter 13: Epigraph 24584 | In Which She Talks to the Dead and Sometimes the Dead Talk Back + artist’s statement, The Dead Talk Back
Charlotte Henay

Part V: On Worlding
Chapter 14: Dreams to Remember: A Conversation on Unsilencing the Archive: An Afronautic Approach
Camille Turner, Mila Mendez, and Heather Evans
Acknowledgments
Bibliography                                                                                                                   
Notes on Contributors
Index
 

Erscheint lt. Verlag 11.2.2025
Reihe/Serie Genocide, Political Violence, Human Rights
Co-Autor Carmela Murdocca, Amber Dean, Karine Duhamel
Zusatzinfo 15 B-W images
Verlagsort New Brunswick NJ
Sprache englisch
Maße 156 x 235 mm
Gewicht 454 g
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Psychologie
Sozialwissenschaften Politik / Verwaltung Politische Theorie
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Gender Studies
ISBN-10 1-9788-4326-7 / 1978843267
ISBN-13 978-1-9788-4326-4 / 9781978843264
Zustand Neuware
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