Theorization of Violence (Israeli-Palestine Conflict)
Theorization of Violence (Israeli-Palestine Conflict)
Author(s): Georgiana Monica IorgaSubject(s): Politics / Political Sciences, Philosophy, Social Sciences, Philosophical Traditions, Political Philosophy, Social Philosophy, Political Sciences, Civil Society, Communication studies, Analytic Philosophy, Theory of Communication, Inter-Ethnic Relations, Geopolitics, Politics of History/Memory, Politics and Identity, Peace and Conflict Studies
Published by: Editura Pro Universitaria
Keywords: ethnic conflict; self-identification; national movement; colonialist conflict; ideologies; religious dimension;
Summary/Abstract: This paper is a text-applied comparative approach to some thematic aspects of the violence throughout theoretical texts belonging to philosophers like, for instance, Frantz Fanon (1925-1961, psychiatrist, philosopher, author from Martinique). Through violence decolonization is achieved, thus a new man is created. Violence is the native’s mean to an end: the formation of a just society. Colonizer’s violence (the violence of the colonial regime) versus Native’s violence (counter-violence). The appearance ot the settler represents the death of the aboriginal society, cultural lethargy and petrification of individuals. Rather than aiming at an exhaustive survey of this topic in English (almost an impossible task, given the amount of such writing that is being produced in the contemporary global age), I shall aim at focusing on a number of recurrent topics approached throughout the chosen theoretical work. My main intention will be to point out various ways in which the textuality of written texts reflect on issues related to ethnic conflict, self-identification, national movement, colonialist conflict, ideologies, religious dimension from a variety of theoretical perspectives, but situated mainly in a transnational and global light. Place and time are connected to memories and homeland as they represent important values for those who live in their homeland or in diaspora (place: where they were born and they spent their childhood or a part of their lives; time: events, customs and traditions associated to a certain moment in their lives).
Journal: Crossing Boundaries in Culture and Communication
- Issue Year: 14/2023
- Issue No: 3
- Page Range: 107-115
- Page Count: 9
- Language: English