Muutke küpsiste eelistusi

Torture [Pehme köide]

  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 180 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 212x134x14 mm, kaal: 227 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Sep-2018
  • Kirjastus: Polity Press
  • ISBN-10: 1509524371
  • ISBN-13: 9781509524372
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Paperback / softback, 180 pages, kõrgus x laius x paksus: 212x134x14 mm, kaal: 227 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 21-Sep-2018
  • Kirjastus: Polity Press
  • ISBN-10: 1509524371
  • ISBN-13: 9781509524372
Teised raamatud teemal:
Torture is not as universally condemned as it once was. After 9/11, its apologists could use the ‘war on terror’ to justify a practice that has in fact never fallen completely out of use, in democracies no less than under dictatorships. From Guantánamo and Abu Ghraib prisons to the death of Giulio Regeni, countless recent cases have shocked public opinion. But if we want to defend the human dignity that torture violates, simple indignation is not enough.

In this penetrating text, Donatella Di Cesare seeks insight from philosophers, playwrights, directors and poets to provide a critical perspective on torture in all its dimensions, culminating in a wholly original ‘phenomenology of torture’. She seeks to capture the peculiarity of an extreme, systematic, methodical violence. This is a violence where the tormentor calculates and measures out pain so that he can hold off the victim’s death, allowing him to continue to exercise his sovereign power. For the victim, being tortured is like experiencing his own death even while he is still alive. It is also a violence inextricably linked with power. Torture is a threat wherever the defenceless find themselves in the hands of the strong: in prisons, on psychiatric wards, in migrant camps, in nursing homes, in centres for the disabled, and in institutions for minors.

This impassioned book equips us to address critically the many forms of torture which continue to occur across our societies today. It will appeal to students and scholars of philosophy and political theory, as well as to anyone committed to defending human rights as universal and inviolable.

Arvustused

"After 9/11, popular culture and some pseudo-intellectual arguments have undermined the universal moral condemnation of torture we could once count on. Donatella di Cesare dissects these false positions one by one. Her book makes a wonderful contribution to the legal, ethical and political debates about torture because it highlights the radical immorality and unscientific basis of the myths they create about the benefits of torture in 'keeping us safe.'" Juan Mendez, Professor of Human Rights Law at the American University and former UN Special Rapporteur on Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman and Degrading Treatment or Punishment

"Donatella Di Cesare is one of the most important voices in contemporary European philosophy.  Her book is a darkly knowing, lucid, and relentless philosophical primer on torture in the age of terrorism.  If human dignity is to survive these bleak times the fierce lessons of Di Cesare's study will need to be absorbed and furthered." Jay Bernstein, New School for Social Research



"An important study of barbarism calls for citizens to be vigilant and to resist." Times Higher Education

Prologue vii
1 The Politics of Torture
1(62)
1 Without end? Torture in the twenty-first century
1(3)
2 Torture and power
4(5)
3 The dark backdrop of sacrifice: torture in the mechanisms of terror
9(4)
4 Torture after the abolition of torture
13(3)
5 The black phoenix
16(3)
6 Torture and democracy
19(2)
7 After 9/11: state of exception, pre-emptive torture
21(4)
8 The debate over torture
25(3)
9 The dilemma of `getting our hands dirty': Thomas Nagel and Michael Walzer
28(5)
10 Alan Dershowitz and the `torture warrant'
33(5)
11 The lesser evil is still an evil
38(2)
12 24: the gentleman torturer
40(1)
13 A political theology of torture
41(3)
14 Why not torture the terrorist? The ticking time bomb
44(7)
15 Dangerous, pseudo-philosophical tales
51(1)
16 Illegitimacy: the torturer state
52(4)
17 A shipwreck of human rights?
56(3)
18 Human dignity in torture
59(4)
2 Phenomenology of Torture
63(41)
1 Defining torture: etymological notes
63(3)
2 `Whoever has succumbed to torture can no longer feel at home in the world' (Amery)
66(4)
3 Torture, genocide, Holocaust
70(2)
4 Killing and torturing
72(3)
5 Between biopower and sovereign power
75(2)
6 Anatomy of the butcher
77(1)
7 Sade, the negation of the other, and the language of violence
78(3)
8 From Torquemada to Scilingo: four portraits
81(7)
9 Born torturers?
88(5)
10 Pedro and the Captain
93(2)
11 The victim's secret
95(2)
12 Saying the word `torture'
97(1)
13 On pain and suffering
98(3)
14 Surviving one's own death
101(3)
3 The Administration of Torture
104(39)
1 Giulio Regeni: the body of the tortured
104(3)
2 Benjamin; or, on an ignominious institution
107(3)
3 The G8 in Genoa
110(4)
4 `No touch' torture: on Stammheim prison
114(3)
5 Desaparecidos: when death is denied
117(5)
6 The CIA's global Gulag
122(4)
7 Guantanamo: a camp for the new millennium
126(3)
8 Abu Ghraib: the photographs of shame
129(2)
9 Women and sexual violence
131(3)
10 In the hands of the stronger
134(3)
11 Torments and torture marked `made in Italy'
137(6)
Epilogue 143(3)
References 146(10)
Index 156
Donatella Di Cesare is Professor of Theoretical Philosophy at the Sapienza University of Rome.