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On Torture | 
enlarge | Creator: Thomas C. Hilde Publisher: The Johns Hopkins University Press Category: Book
List Price: $25.00 Buy New: $15.41 You Save: $9.59 (38%)
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Rating: 2 reviews Sales Rank: 487568
Media: Paperback Pages: 238 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8 Dimensions (in): 8.9 x 5.9 x 0.7
ISBN: 0801890268 Dewey Decimal Number: 323 EAN: 9780801890260
Publication Date: October 28, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Brand new item. Over 4 million customers served. Order now. Selling online since 1995. Few left in stock - order soon. Code: J20090104183424S
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Product Description
Globally, no single issue resonates today as much as torture or allegations thereof. Under the current rubric of the war on terror, the governments of the United States and other democratic nations that have long decried human rights abuses have sought to alter the tone, tenor, and definition of the term. From where does the basis for this new paradigm derive? How might it affect a nation's moral and official authority in the eyes of its citizenry and the world? When, if ever, can torture be an accepted practice? What are the psychological and physical aftereffects of such physical and mental violence on the victim, the practitioner, and the populations in whose name torture is committed? The essays gathered in On Torture, a special issue of South Central Review, explore these questions in a philosophical and empirical light. They discuss the definitions of torture, examine the logical underpinnings of the practice as a means of control and of extracting information, assay the manner in which such actions are taken and how they are officially depicted, and offer an overview of government-sanctioned torture in the modern era. In surveying the realities of torture, the contributors unearth commonalities in the creation of torturers during the Algerian War, the systematic abuses that enabled Germany's Nazi regime to function, the dehumanizing manner with which the Israeli Defense Forces allegedly treat Palestinians in the Occupied Territories, and the American public's acquiescence to the new norm after the September 11 terror attacks. They reveal the parallels between the institutionalization of torture within nations and the glorification of war and violence in artistic endeavors throughout the ages and explain how internalizing and accepting torture usurps individual freedom and subverts humanity.
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Insightful... November 30, 2008 FGnofo (Cutchogue, NY United States) This book avoids the usual policy and legal debates on torture and, rather, humanizes the issue of torture, which the books the previous reviewer cites mostly do not. For example, some of the authors in the collection have experienced their subject first-hand. I find the arguments in this book to be original and compelling and the mental imagery stark and unique. It's a very refreshing voice on this difficult subject, but unfortunately continuing practice.
Old wine in a new bottle November 15, 2008 Kerry Walters (Lewisburg, PA USA) 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
The essays in Thomas Hilde's On Torture are all competent, and one of them--Darius Rejali's insightful "Torture Makes the Man" (pp. 165-83)--is a stunner. But for the most part, the voices collected in the volume are utterly unoriginal. This is too bad, because if there's a topic lately that's generated much heat but not a lot of light, it's torture. We're badly in need of deep thought on not only the morality of torture, but also the very definition of it. (This evidenced by the public policy wrangling about what is and what isn't torture. Much of the debate is, admittedly, partisan-driven. But the issue is still a live one.) Moreover, we're likewise badly in need of analyses of what torture does to the identity of victims, perpetrators, and societies that countenance torture as a public policy. Elaine Scarry's magisterial The Body in Pain (1985) was the last attempt to try to make sense of that issue. But the essays in On Torture don't really step up to the plate. The two big-named contributions by Barbara Ehrenreich and Ariel Dorfman are reprints of earlier publications. While Dorfman's two short pieces are worth re-reading, Ehrenreich's reflection on female Abu Ghraib torturers is still as fluffy as it was when it appeared in 2004. The rest of the essays, especially written for this collection, are interesting but hardly informative. Four of them (written by Rebecca Whittmann, Tzvetan Todorov, Adi Ophir, and Margarita Serje) focus on torture in Nazi Germany, Algeria, Palestine, and Columbia, ground that's already exceedingly well-trodden. Others (written by Carlos Castresana and Michael Hatfield) focus on torture, public policy, and the law, basically reproducing points made by the contributions to Sanford Levinson's earlier Torture: A Collection (2004) or Karen J. Greenberg's The Torture Debate in America (2006). Others (the essays written, for example, by Christopher Arrendondo, Stephanie Athey, Alphonso Lingis, and Eduardo Subirats) hone in on definitional, ethical and human rights issues surrounding torture, covering ground already plowed by the contributors to Kenneth Roth's Torture: A Human Rights Perspective (2005) or William Schulz's excellent The Phenomenon of Torture (2007). Again: all are competent. But none (excepting Rejali's) offers anything new to the reader already familiar with the pertinent literature. Instead, they repeat well-established truths: for example, torture solicits lots of information but not much truth; torturers are brutalized by what they do; both genders are capable of torturing; torture is a means of controlling dissent; and torture is frequently treated by perpetrators as an unreal game in order to insulate themselves from the horror of what they do. Two and a half stars.
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