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The Politics of Violence: Gender, Conflict and Community in El Salvador

ISBN: 978-1-405-19226-2

November 2009

Wiley-Blackwell

212 pages

Description
The Politics of Violence develops an interdisciplinary feminist perspective grounded in original ethnographic research on everyday forms of violence in El Salvador. Hume challenges dominant theories of violence through foregrounding subaltern vocabularies that have been historically ignored in debates on violence.
  • Unites a critical analysis of theories of violence with original ethnographic research on its use and broader responses to its different manifestations
  • Makes an important theoretical contribution to debates on violence, through developing in-depth accounts of the violence of everyday life from a feminist perspective
  • Examines the vocabularies of violence of those who live with it on an everyday basis, locating these vocabularies in a critical analysis of the relations of domination that have shaped Salvadoran history
About the Author
Mo Hume is a lecturer in Politics at the University of Glasgow and co-convenor of the International Centre for Gender and Women’s Studies. She has carried out extensive ethnographic research in El Salvador, where she worked for several years with the women’s movement.
Features

  • Develops an inter-disciplinary feminist perspective grounded in original ethnographic research on everyday forms of violence in El Salvador
  • Unites a critical analysis of theories of violence with original ethnographic research on its use and broader responses to its different manifestations
  • Makes an important theoretical contribution to debates on violence, through developing in depth accounts of the violences of everyday life from a feminist perspective.
  • Examines the vocabularies of violence of those who live with it on an everyday basis, locating these vocabularies in a critical analysis of the relations of domination that have shaped Salvadoran history.
  • Challenges dominant theories of violence by foregrounding subaltern vocabularies that have been historically ignored in debates on violence