Part 1 Sign of Trauma Chapter 2 Thinking About Violence Between Theory and (Auto)Biography Chapter 3 Shattered Worlds and Shocked Understandings Chapter 4 A Legacy of Women in Dark Times Part 5 Shapes of Violence Chapter 6 Thoughtless Action Into Nature and The Violence of Genocide Chapter 7 An Excursus (Perhaps): Eichmann in Jerusalem and Post-Zionism Chapter 8 Violence in the Intersection of Nationalism and the State Form Part 9 Ambiguous Alternatives Chapter 10 Violent Bodies
Bat-Ami Bar On is associate professor of philosophy and women's studies at Binghamton University in New York and author of Jewish Locations (Rowman & Littlefield, 2001).
An honest and uncompromising look at violence in a myriad of forms,
and the ways that it shapes individuals, nation-states, and
cultures. It explores significant issues for feminists, and is well
worth reading.
*Hypatia: A Journal of Feminist Philosophy*
Recommended.
*CHOICE*
Bat-Ami Bar On's stunning achievement in The Subject of Violence is
to think, as Hannah Arendt did, 'without bannisters' about issues
before which all too many minds stop, or retreat into conventional
(including conventionally radical) categories. Bar On's personal
questioning is fiercely passionate, radically open, widely and
deeply knowledgeable: this is the work of a morally serious,
courageously honest thinker.
*Elizabeth Minnich, Union Institute & University*
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