The Democratic Arts of Mourning

The Democratic Arts of Mourning
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Political Theory and Loss
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Artikel-Nr:
9781498567251
Veröffentl:
2019
Seiten:
252
Autor:
Alexander Keller Hirsch
eBook Typ:
EPUB
Kopierschutz:
Adobe DRM [Hard-DRM]
Sprache:
Englisch
Beschreibung:

This book reflects on the variety of ways in which mourning affects political and social life. Through the narrative of the contributors, the book demonstrates how mourning is intertwined with politics and how politics involves a struggle over which losses and whose lives can, or should, be mourned.
The Democratic Arts of Mourning reflects on the variety of ways in which mourning affects political and social life. In recent decades, political theorists have increasingly examined and explored the themes of loss, grief, and mourning. With an introduction that contextualizes the turn to mourning in previous scholarship on the politics of tragedy, this book includes twelve chapters that clarify the intertwinement between politics and mourning. The chapters are organized into five thematic sections that each shed light on how democratic societies relate to loss, grief, suffering, and death. Collectively, the chapters explore the concept of mourning and its relationship to civic rituals, memorials, taboos, social movements, and popular music. Chapters examine how social groups defend their members against experiences of grief or mourning, or how poetic expressions—such as ancient Greek tragedy—can address the catastrophes of human life. Other chapters explore the politics of symbols and bodies, and how they can become fraught objects that stand in for a society’s undigested—unmourned—losses and absences. The book concludes with an interview with Bonnie Honig, whose own work on mourning has been deeply influential in contemporary political theory.
Chapter 1: Groups Can Hardly Mourn, by C. Fred Alford

Chapter 2: Must we Always Mourn? A War on Terror Veterans Memorial, by Steven Johnston

Chapter 3: Removing the Confederate Flag in South Carolina in the Wake of Charleston:

Sovereignty, Symbolism, and White Domination in a “Colorblind” State, by Heather Pool

Chapter 4: Mourning Denied: The Tabooed Subject, by Claudia Leeb

Chapter 5: Not In My Graveyard, by Osman Balkan

Chapter 6: Reparations, Refusals, and Grief: Idle No More and Democratic Mourning, by Vicki Hsueh

Chapter 7: Burning Rage: Disenfranchised Mourning and the Political Possibilities of Anger, by Shirin S. Deylami

Chapter 8: The Funeral and the Riot: #BlackLivesMatter, Antagonistic Politics, and the Limits of (Exceptional) Mourning, by David Myer Temin

Chapter 9: Music, Mourning, and Democratic Resilience: Bruce Springsteen’s The Rising, by Simon Stow

Chapter 10: Speaking Silence: Holding and the Democratic Arts of Mourning, by Joel Schlosser

Chapter 11: Rituals of Re-Entry: An Interview with Bonnie Honig, by David W. McIvor and Alexander Keller Hirsch

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