Routledge Handbook of Religion, Mass Atrocity, and Genocide

Routledge Handbook of Religion, Mass Atrocity, and Genocide

Smith, Stephen D.; Brown, Sara E.

Taylor & Francis Ltd

11/2021

480

Dura

Inglês

9780367321505

15 a 20 dias

453

Descrição não disponível.
Section 1: Genocide in Antiquity and Holy Wars 1. Genocide in Antiquity 2. The Roots of Antisemitism and Genocide in Christian Antiquity 3. Esau and Amalek in the Hebrew Bible and in Second Temple Jewish Apocalyptic Literature: From Propaganda to Genocide 4. Holy Wars, Judaism, Violence, and Genocide: An Unholy Quadrinity? 5. The Last Crusade: Holy War and Genocidal Practices in the Case of the Spanish Civil War (1936-1939) 6. Alawite Warrior-Sheikhs: Ali Khizam and the Specter of Sectarian Violence in Syria Section 2: The Genocide of Indigenous Peoples 7. Renewing the World: Disrupting Settler-Colonial Destruction 8. Colonial New England: Genocide and the Negative Myth of the Other 9. The Religious Challenges of Linking Holocaust Memory with Colonial Violence 10. Sexual Violence as Genocide against Indigenous Peoples: the Case of Mayan Women in Guatemala Section 3: Religion and the State 11. Religion: A Driving Force But not a Major Cause of the Turkish Genocide of Armenians 12. The Christian Churches, the Nazi State, and the Holocaust 13. Religion and the 1994 Genocide against the Tutsi in Rwanda 14. The "Nature of Death" in the 1947 India-Pakistan Partition Genocide 15. Ritualcide Under the Khmer Rouge in Cambodia: Animism, Genocide and War Crimes 16. Race, Religion, and the Genocide of the Jews in Nazi Germany 17. Catholicism and State Terror in Argentina 18. Religious Communities as Targets of the Khmer Rouge Genocide 19. Dangerous Speech Cloaked in Saffron Robes: Race, Religion, and Anti-Muslim Violence in Myanmar 20. The Uyghur People: History Geography, Religion, Language Section 4: The Role of Religion During Genocide 21. Religion, Resistance, and Responding to Genocide: The Cham in Cambodia 22. Sinners or Saviors: A Personal Perspective on Surviving the Holocaust 23. Rwanda 1994: The Creation of Religious Identities in Genocide Propaganda 24. Faith and Women Rescuers in Rwanda 25. Jehovah's Witnesses as 'Citizens of the Kingdom of God' 26. Music, Religion, and Genocide Section 5: Post Genocide Considerations 27. "For Dust Thou Art, and Unto Dust Shalt Thou Return": Jewish Law, Forensic Investigation, and Archaeology in the Aftermath of the Holocaust 28. Forensics and Maya Ceremonies: The Long Journey for Truth in Guatemala 29. Reforming the Church's Theology of the Jews: Christian Responses to the Holocaust 30. Mozambique: Religious Practices and Post-conflict Processes 31. Iraq and the Halabja 'Genocide': The need for Transformative Justice 32. Personal Philosophies of Forgiveness after Genocide 33. Genocide and the Human Right to Freedom of Religion 34. Survival: The Case of Yezidi Women 35. An Assessment of the United Nations Plan of Action for Religious Leaders and Actors to Prevent Incitement to Violence that Could Lead to Atrocity Crimes Section 6: Memory Culture 36. The Power of One: Narrative Analysis and an Iranian Jewish Shoah Survivor 37. Beyond Competitive Memory: The Preeminence of the Holocaust in Religious Studies 38. Muslim and Christian Perspectives on the Holocaust and Genocide 39. Analyzing Holocaust Archives Through a Quantitative Lens Epilogue: What we know and what we still need to know
Violated;Young Man;Author's Interview;UN;Christian Church;Atrocity Crimes;USC Shoah Foundation;Adolf Hitler;Mass Atrocity;German Protestant Church;Confessing Church;Contemporary Society;Ma Ba Tha;Internal Armed Conflict;Muslim Chams;Forensic Anthropology;Transitional Justice;Women Rescuers;German Christians;DNA Match;Mayan Ceremonies;Secretary Of State;Armenian Church;Interahamwe Militia;World Renewal Ceremonies