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About The Book
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<p>This book offers both a conceptual and an empirical analysis of how violence is normalized. In its conceptual analysis Irm Haleem offers a framework of explanation that she argues is universal in its narratives which she submits is premised on moralizing legalizing and popularizing violence. Haleem engages Stathis Kalyvas’s notion of the two stages of violence (process and outcome) and proposes the notion of metaphysical violence as distinct from physical violence. Through drawing upon works of scholars such as Hannah Arendt Noam Chomsky W.J.T. Mitchell Michel Foucault Jacques Derrida George Kateb and others she illustrates why these distinctions (of stages and types of violence) are critical in understanding how violence is normalized.</p><p>In its empirical analysis Naoko Kumada argues that the contemporary changes in narratives and educational curriculum in Japan are intended to moralize the historic glory days of imperial Japan which she argues may subsequently normalize militarism. Stefanie Kam focuses on how China has normalized violence in Xinjiang through narratives of the imperatives of security thereby both legalizing and moralizing violence. Jennifer Dhanaraj argues how the denial of citizenship to the Rohingya community in Myanmar has provided both the moral and legal justifications for Buddhist extremists and the military to wage a brutal and unbridled war against the Rohingyas. Finally Abdul Basit examines how the ex-communication of the Ahmadi sectarian minority in Pakistan has criminalized the minority thus paving the way for unbridled violence against them from extremist mobs that have justified their violence in moral and legal terms. In all the cases in this book we see how violence is popularized as being either a matter of the will of the people or as being for the greater good of the people.</p>