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E-raamat: Imagining Human Rights [De Gruyter e-raamatud]

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  • Formaat: 235 pages, 1 Tables, black and white; 12 Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Sep-2015
  • Kirjastus: De Gruyter
  • ISBN-13: 9783110376616
  • De Gruyter e-raamatud
  • Hind: 131,94 €*
  • * hind, mis tagab piiramatu üheaegsete kasutajate arvuga ligipääsu piiramatuks ajaks
  • Formaat: 235 pages, 1 Tables, black and white; 12 Illustrations
  • Ilmumisaeg: 30-Sep-2015
  • Kirjastus: De Gruyter
  • ISBN-13: 9783110376616
Why is it that human rights are considered inviolable norms of justice at local and global scales although the number of their violations has steadily increased in modern history? On the surface, this paradox seems to be reducible to a straightforward discrepancy between idealism and reality in humanitarian affairs, but Imagining Human Rights complicates the picture by offering interdisciplinary perspectives on the imaginary status of human rights. By that the contributors mean not merely subject to imagination, open to interpretation or far too abstract, but also formative of a social imaginary with emphatic identifications and shared values. From a variety of disciplinary perspectives, they explore critical ways of engaging in rigorous interdisciplinary conversations about the origin and language of human rights, personal dignity, redistributive justice, and international solidarity. Together, they show how and why a careful examination of the intersection between disciplinary investigations is essential for imagining human rights at large. Examples range from the legitimacy of land ownership rights and the inadequacy of human faculty to make sense of mass violence in visual representation to the stewardship of human rights promoters and the genealogy of human rights.
Acknowledgments v
Introduction: Imagining Human Rights 1(8)
Susanne Kaul
David Kim
The Sacredness of the Person or The Last Utopia: A Conversation about the History of Human Rights
9(26)
Hans Joas
Samuel Moyn
Section One Claiming Human Rights
The Progressive Potential of Human Rights
35(20)
Thomas Pogge
The More Who Die, the Less We Care: Psychic Numbing and Genocide
55(14)
Paul Slovic
Daniel Vastfjall
On Invoking Human Rights When There Aren't Any
69(14)
Rudiger Bittner
The Cosmopolitics of Parrhesia: Foucault and Truth-Telling as Human Right
83(18)
David Kim
Imagining Threatened Peoples: The Society for Threatened Peoples (Gesellschaft fur bedrohte Volker) in 1970s West Germany
101(18)
Lora Wildenthal
Neoliberal Charity: German Contraband Humanitarians in Kenya
119(20)
Nina Berman
Section Two Human Rights in Imagination
Poetic Anarchy and Human Rights: Dissensus in Georg Buchner's Danton's Death and Peter Weiss's Marat/Sade
139(18)
Sebastian Wogenstein
The Aesthetics of Human Rights in Franz Werfel's The Forty Days of Musa Dagh
157(16)
Oliver Kohns
The Right To Tell That It Hurt: Fiction and Political Performance of Human Rights in South Africa
173(14)
Michael Bosch
Susanne Kaul
Embodiment and Immigrant Rights in Alejandro Gonzalez Inarritu's Biutiful
187(14)
Elizabeth S. Anker
Why Them, and Not I? An Account of Kalliopi Lemos's Art Projects About Human Dignity
201(16)
Artemis Manolopoulou
List of Contributors 217(4)
Index of Persons 221(4)
Index of Subjects 225
Susanne Kaul, University of Münster, Germany; David D. Kim, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.