
Peace-Making and the Imagination
Papua New Guinea Perspectives
- 287 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
A compelling new book that presents a thoughtful and creative approach to transforming violent discordances, this work examines the intractable issues of revenge and restitution in a conflict context. It argues that in communities where violence must be paid for through compensation, violent conflict can be contained. With primary reference to the Highlands of Papua New Guinea and comparisons to cases from Africa, Pakistan, and other arenas of tribal social formations, the account explores how rituals such as wealth disbursement, oath taking, sacrifice, and formal apologies are often used as a means of averting or transcending acts of vengeance after violence. Through exploration ofΒ the balance between revenge and compensation at different junctures in the peace-making process, this compelling text devises a thought-provoking and inventive analysis that would benefit countless communities in conflict around the world.
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Information
Table of contents
- Front Cover
- Author biographies
- Other titles in this series
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Dedication
- Note from Series Editor
- Contents
- Preface
- Chapter 1 β Terror and violence in imagination and practice
- Chapter 2 β Dimensions of violence: revenge and sorcery (Mount Hagen, PNG)
- Chapter 3 β Warfare and peace-making: comparative histories
- Chapter 4 β Escalations and complexities: early elections
- Chapter 5 β Escalations and complexities: turns of history
- Chapter 6 β The problems of peacemakers: intermediate sovereigns
- Chapter 7 β Transcending violence: the place of ritual
- Chapter 8 β Conclusions and comparisons
- Chapter 9 β Envoi: three themes beyond the local
- Appendix
- Acknowledgements
- References
- Index