Makdisi Ussama, and Paul A. Silverstein. Memory and Violence in the Middle East and North Africa.

PositionBOOKS IN BRIEF--SUMMER/FALL 2007 - Book review

Makdisi Ussama, and Paul A. Silverstein. Memory and Violence in the Middle East and North Africa. Bloomington, IN: Indiana University Press, 2006. Paper $24.95.

Memory and Violence explores the relation between histories of violence and their contemporary commemoration. Violent processes of colonialism and decolonization have indeed shaped and informed local communities by commemorating them, but failed to inform the official governments in the Middle East and North Africa. In a captivating volume of nine authors/case studies this crucial argument is made. Makdisi and Silverstein transcend reified socio-geographic categories and ideological ideas of a "clash of civilization" to demonstrating the lasting effects of past struggles on present confrontations. They believe that future peace prospects are limited due the unaccountability of such memories of conflict, especially in this neoconservative era of "A New American Century."

The volume is divided into two parts (resolution and reconciliation and archaeology of memory) and is preceded by an extensive introduction. Memories of particular historical events within the Algerian War, the Lebanese civil war, the Palestinian Intifada, and other national conflicts have been variously narrated in the imagination of different forms of postcolonial communities. "In examining the various representations of these national conflicts, the contributors demonstrate how the return to past moments of violence has in fact paved the way to the constitution of a multiplicity of post-colonial (if not post national) subjectivities" (11-12). The nine contributors are: Glenn Bowman on Palestine; James...

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