Writing Human Rights

Writing Human Rights
Author: Crystal Parikh
Publisher: U of Minnesota Press
Total Pages: 469
Release: 2017-10-17
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1452954674

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The legal texts and aspirational ideals of human rights are usually understood and applied in a global context with little bearing on the legal discourse, domestic political struggles, or social justice concerns within the United States. In Writing Human Rights, Crystal Parikh uses the international human rights regime to read works by contemporary American writers of color—Toni Morrison, Chang-rae Lee, Ana Castillo, Aimee Phan, and others—to explore the conditions under which new norms, more capacious formulations of rights, and alternative kinds of political communities emerge. Parikh contends that unlike humanitarianism, which views its objects as victims, human rights provide avenues for the creation of political subjects. Pairing the ethical deliberations in such works as Beloved and A Gesture Life with human rights texts like the United Nations Convention Against Torture, she considers why principles articulated as rights in international conventions and treaties—such as the right to self-determination or the right to family—are too often disregarded at home. Human rights concepts instead provide writers of color with a deeply meaningful method for political and moral imagining in their literature. Affiliating transnational works of American literature with decolonization, socialist, and other political struggles in the global south, this book illuminates a human rights critique of idealized American rights and freedoms that have been globalized in the twenty-first century. In the absence of domestic human rights enforcement, these literatures provide a considerable repository for those ways of life and subjects of rights made otherwise impossible in the present antidemocratic moment.


Writing Human Rights
Language: en
Pages: 469
Authors: Crystal Parikh
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2017-10-17 - Publisher: U of Minnesota Press

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The legal texts and aspirational ideals of human rights are usually understood and applied in a global context with little bearing on the legal discourse, domes
Writing and Righting
Language: en
Pages: 177
Authors: Lyndsey Stonebridge
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2021 - Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA

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Lyndsey Stonebridge presents a new way to think about the relationship between literature and human rights that challenges the idea that empathy inspires action
The Novel of Human Rights
Language: en
Pages: 201
Authors: James Dawes
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2018-09-12 - Publisher: Harvard University Press

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The Novel of Human Rights defines a new, dynamic American literary genre. It incorporates key debates within the contemporary human rights movement in the Unite
Human Rights and Literature
Language: en
Pages: 170
Authors: Pramod K. Nayar
Categories: Political Science
Type: BOOK - Published: 2016-11-23 - Publisher: Springer

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Set at the intersection of Human Rights, social justice and Literature, this cutting edge book examines a range of literary texts, fiction, plays and poetry, an
Writing Wrongs
Language: en
Pages: 217
Authors: Pramod K. Nayar
Categories: Political Science
Type: BOOK - Published: 2014-03-21 - Publisher: Routledge

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This book examines the ‘cultural apparatus’ of Human Rights in India today. It unravels discourses of victimhood, oppression, suffering and witnessing throu