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The Social Construction of Man, the State and War: Identity, Conflict, and Violence in Former Yugoslavia



The Social Construction of Man, the State and War: Identity, Conflict, and Violence in Former Yugoslavia
The Social Construction of Man, State, and War is a book that seeks to answer the question of why war exists. The book is divided into three parts: Identity, Conflict, and Violence. The first part, Identity, discusses the ways in which people construct their identities in relation to war. The second part, Conflict, discusses the ways in which war affects the relationships between people. The third... more details
Key Features:
  • The book seeks to answer the question of why war exists
  • The book is divided into three parts: Identity, Conflict, and Violence
  • The first part, Identity, discusses the ways in which people construct their identities in relation to war.


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Features
Author Franke Wilmer
Format Trade paperback
ISBN 9780415929639
Publisher Routledge
Manufacturer Routledge
Description
The Social Construction of Man, State, and War is a book that seeks to answer the question of why war exists. The book is divided into three parts: Identity, Conflict, and Violence. The first part, Identity, discusses the ways in which people construct their identities in relation to war. The second part, Conflict, discusses the ways in which war affects the relationships between people. The third part, Violence, discusses the ways in which war affects the bodies of people. The book is written by Franke Wilmer and it is based on her interviews with the local war-weary population in the former Yugoslavia.

The study of international relations revolves around the question, "why war?" The Social Construction of Man, State, and War seek to answer this question by examining the practice of warfare and its dehumanizing effects in the context of the former Yugoslavia. However, Franke Wilmer also dares to pose more difficult questions beyond those normally asked. Why war now? And why here? Why so much brutality? Conventional arguments provide little or no answers. Ethnic conflict is the phrase most often invoked, but with little regard to how identity is constructed or deployed. To answer these questions, Wilmer combines effective theoretical analysis with her powerful interviews with the local war-weary population. By adding this psychoanalytic element, Wilmer assembles an explanation that could not be built with normal international relations tools alone. Studies of war with this critical force, combined with this deep sense of humanity, are rare, making The Social Construction of Man, State, and War a fundamental addition to our understanding of man's inhumanity to man.
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