Civil Society, the Juridical and Political Space in Cambodia
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Köp båda 2 för 2386 krA subtle and searching examination of the interplay of resistance and power in the dynamics of social change, Resisting Gendered Norms raises challenging questions about body, culture, discourse, identity, memory and space. Exploring these issues through richly textured evidence from Cambodia generates provocative reflections on womens and mens possibilities. Jan Aart Scholte, University of Warwick, UK Resisting Gendered Norms explores gendered patterns of power and resistance in post-Khmer Rouge Cambodia. Memories of the killing regime are revealed as sites of struggle, wherein various actors utilize mythologization, medicalization, and denial to gain control over the means of enunciation. Liljas exploration of struggles over the meaning of forced marriages is a particularly powerful example of biopolitical practices of power and resistance in womens lives. Kathy E. Ferguson, University of Hawaii, USA 'Drawing on different case studies of discursive resistance in Cambodia, the book provides a powerful and dense analysis of the entanglements of power and resistance around gender in a post-conflict country. Spanning different arenas (the political sphere, civil society, the ECCC), it will attract the interest of researchers focusing on Cambodia as well as those working on gender studies, resistance studies or transitional justice.' Journal of Contemporary Asia 'This book will be of interest to Southeast Asianists who teach or study global/local gender relations. So, too, it will be of interest to scholars and students of Cambodia generally, and especially to those interested in post-1975 social developments.' Pacific Affairs
Mona Lilja is Associate Professor in Peace and Development Studies and Senior Lecturer in Gender Studies at the University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
Foreword, Mona Lilja; Preface, Mona Lilja; Chapter 1 Introduction, Mona Lilja; Chapter 2 Theorising Power and Resistance, Mona Lilja; Chapter 3 Gender Roles and Practices in Cambodia, Mona Lilja; Part I Gender, Resistance and Gender-Based Violence, Mona Lilja; Chapter 4 Theorising Practice: Understanding Resistance Against Gender-Based Violence in Cambodia, Mona Lilja; Chapter 5 The Construction of a Trauma: Gender-Based Violence Issues in the Extraordinary Court of the Chambers of Cambodia, Mona Lilja; Chapter 6 Bearing Witness:Gender, Resistance and National Politics, Mona Lilja; Chapter 7 Gendering Political Legitimacy Through the Reproduction of Memories and Violent Discourses in Cambodia, Mona Lilja; Chapter 8 Globalisation, Women's Political Part icipation and the Politics of Legitimacy and Reconstruction in Cambodia, Mona Lilja; Chapter 9 Theorising Resistance: Mapping, Concretism and Universalism, Mona Lilja; Chapter 10 The Gaps of the Linguistic Turn: Resistance in the Nexus of Representations, the Surplus and the Material, Mona Lilja; Chapter 11 Concluding Reflections, Mona Lilja;