Torture H 180 p. 18
Di Cesare, D 著
目次
Prologue Chapter One. The politics of torture 1. Without end? Torture in the twenty–first century 2. Torture and Power 3. The dark backdrop of sacrifice. Torture in the mechanisms of terror 4. Torture after the abolition of torture 5. The Black Phoenix 6. Torture and democracy 7. After 9/11. State of exception, pre–emptive torture 8. The debate over torture 9. The dilemma of ‘getting our hands dirty’. Thomas Nagel and Michael Walzer 10. Alan Dershowitz and the ‘torture warrant’ 11. The lesser evil is still an evil 12. 24. The gentleman torturer 13. A political theology of torture 14. Why not torture the terrorist? The ticking time bomb 15. Dangerous, pseudo–philosophical tales 16. Illegitimacy. The torturer–state 17. A shipwreck of human rights? 18. Human dignity in torture Chapter Two. Phenomenology of Torture 1. Defining torture. Etymological notes 2. ‘Whoever has succumbed to torture can no longer feel at home in the world’ – Améry 3. Torture, genocide, Holocaust 4. Killing and torturing 5. Between biopower and sovereign power 6. Anatomy of the butcher 7. Sade, the negation of the other, and the language of violence 8. From Torquemada to Scilingo. Four portraits 9. Born torturers? 10. Pedro and the Captain 11. The victim’s secret 12. Saying the word ‘torture’ 13. On pain and suffering 14. Surviving one’s own death Chapter Three. The Administration of Torture 1. Giulio Regeni. The body of the tortured 2. Benjamin; or, on an ignominious institution 3. The G8 in Genoa 4. ‘No touch’ torture. On Stammheim prison 5. Desaparecidos, disappeared. When death is denied 6. The CIA’s global gulag 7. Guantánamo. A camp for the new millennium 8. Abu Ghraib. The photographs of shame 9. Women and sexual violence 10. In the hands of the stronger 11. Torments and torture marked ‘made in Italy’ Epilogue References
カート
カートに商品は入っていません。