The book at a glance
Hypatia 21 (2) (2006)
| Abstract | : Violence is a spectacle. Not because it is simply something that we observe but, more fundamentally, because it is a mechanism through which we observe and define other things. Violence has the capacity to shape the ways that we see, and thereby come to know, these things. In other words, violence is more than a practice that acts upon the bodies of individual subjects to inflict harm and injury. It is, metaphorically speaking, also a way of looking at these subjects | |||||||||
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Stathis N. Kalyvas (2004). The Paradox of Terrorism in Civil War. Journal of Ethics 8 (1):97-138.
Edward S. Casey (2001). Taking a Glance at the Environment: Prolegomena to an Ethics of the Environment. Research in Phenomenology 31 (1):1-21.
Will Johncock (2012). Modifying the Modifier: Body Modification as Social Incarnation. Journal for the Theory of Social Behaviour 42 (3):241-259.
Karen Houle (2006). The Manifolds of Violences. Hypatia 21 (2).
Gail Mason (2006). Symposium: The Spectacle of Violence: Homophobia, Gender, and Knowledge: The Book at a Glance. Hypatia 21 (2):174-206.
Bat-Ami Bar On (2002). The Subject of Violence: Arendtean Exercises in Understanding. Rowman and Littlefield.
Kai Nielsen (1981). On Justifying Violence. Inquiry 24 (1):21 – 57.
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