War and memory in Lebanon [Texte imprimé] / Sune Haugbolle,...
Langue: anglais.Pays: multiple.Publication : CambridgeNew York, Melbourne [etc.] : Cambridge University press, cop. 2010Description : 1 vol. (XIII-260 p.) : ill., carte, couv. ill. en coul. ; 24 cmCollection : Cambridge Middle East studies, 34ISBN: 978-0-521-19902-5 ; 0-521-19902-6.Collection : Dewey: 956.92, 22 ; 956.9204/4, 22Résumé: From 1975 to 1990, Lebanon endured one of the most protracted and bloody civil wars of the twentieth century. Sune Haugbolle's timely and often poignant book chronicles the battle over ideas that emerged from the wreckage of that war. While the Lebanese state encouraged forgetfulness and political parties created sectarian interpretations of the war through cults of dead leaders, intellectuals and activists--inspired by the example of truth and reconciliation movements in different parts of the world--advanced the idea that confronting and remembering the war was necessary for political and cultural renewal. Through an analysis of different cultural productions--media, art, literature, film, posters, and architecture--the author shows how the recollection and reconstruction of political and sectarian violence that took place during the war have helped in Lebanon's healing process. He also shows how a willingness to confront the past influenced the popular uprising in Lebanon after the assassination of Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri.Bibliographie: Bibliogr. p. 239-253. Notes bibliogr. Index.Sujet - Nom de personne: Hariri, Rafic, 1944-2005 Assassinat | Assad, Hafez el-, 1930-2000 Et le Liban | Assad, Bashar, 1965- Et le Liban Sujet - Auteur collectivité: Hezbollah Sujet - Nom commun: Mémoire collective -- Liban 1990- | Commissions vérité et réconciliation -- Liban 1990- | Guerre, Aspect social -- Liban 1990- | Guerre du Liban (2006) | Violence -- Liban 1990- | Reconstruction de l'État -- Liban 1990- | Collective memory -- Lebanon | Memory -- Social aspects -- Lebanon | War and society -- Lebanon Sujet - Nom géographique: Lebanon -- History -- Civil War, 1975-1990 -- Influence | Lebanon -- Social conditions | Lebanon -- Intellectual life | Lebanon -- Politics and government -- 1990- | Liban, 1975-1990 (Guerre civile) Influence | Liban, Politique et gouvernement, 1975-1990 | Liban -- Relations interethniques 1945- | Liban, Relations extérieures, 1975- | Liban -- Vie intellectuelle 1990- | Liban, Conditions sociales, 1975-Site actuel | Collection | Cote | Statut | Notes | Date de retour prévue | Code à barres |
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Bibliothèque Beyrouth Magasin | Achat | CL8-4732 | Disponible | El-Bourj-Fact FC56-01/10/2010 | 0000000787 |
Bibliogr. p. 239-253. Notes bibliogr. Index
From 1975 to 1990, Lebanon endured one of the most protracted and bloody civil wars of the twentieth century. Sune Haugbolle's timely and often poignant book chronicles the battle over ideas that emerged from the wreckage of that war. While the Lebanese state encouraged forgetfulness and political parties created sectarian interpretations of the war through cults of dead leaders, intellectuals and activists--inspired by the example of truth and reconciliation movements in different parts of the world--advanced the idea that confronting and remembering the war was necessary for political and cultural renewal. Through an analysis of different cultural productions--media, art, literature, film, posters, and architecture--the author shows how the recollection and reconstruction of political and sectarian violence that took place during the war have helped in Lebanon's healing process. He also shows how a willingness to confront the past influenced the popular uprising in Lebanon after the assassination of Prime Minister Rafiq Hariri
Prologue : A hiatus of history Remembering a war of selves and others Culture, politics, civil war Discourses on amnesia and reconstruction : memory in the 1990s Nostalgias Inside violence Sectarian memory cultures Truth telling in the Independence Intifada