Lament as Transitional Justice

Human Rights Review 15 (3):259-281 (2014)
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Abstract

Works of human rights literature help to ground the formal rights system in an informal rights ethos. Writers have developed four major modes of human rights literature as follows: protest, testimony, lament, and laughter. Through interpretations of poetry in Carolyn Forché’s anthology, Against Forgetting, and novels from Rwanda, the US, and Bosnia, I focus on the mode of lament, the literature of mourning. Lament is a social and ritualized form, the purposes of which are congruent with the aims of transitional justice institutions. Both laments and truth commissions employ grieving narratives to help survivors of human rights trauma bequeath to the ghosts of the past the justice of a monument while renewing the survivors’ capacity for rebuilding civil society in the future. Human rights scholars need a broader, extrajuridical meaning for “transitional justice” if we hope to capture its power.

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A Philosophical Enquiry Into the Origin of Our Ideas: Of the Sublime and the Beautiful.Edmund Burke - 1759 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press UK. Edited by Paul Guyer.
The Critique of Judgment.Immanuel Kant - 1892 - Oxford: Prometheus Books. Edited by J. H. Bernard.
A Philosophical Enquiry Into the Origin of Our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautifu.Edmund Burke - 1759 - Oxford, United Kingdom: Oxford University Press UK. Edited by Paul Guyer.

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