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Showing posts with label trial. Show all posts
Showing posts with label trial. Show all posts

03 June 2020

BOOK: Awol ALLO, Law and Resistance: Toward a Performative Epistemology of the Political Trial (Boca Raton: CRC Press, 2020). ISBN 9781138693951, £68.00


(Source: CRC Press)

CRC Press is publishing “Law and Resistance: Toward a Performative Epistemology of the Political Trial”.

ABOUT THE BOOK

Taking Michel Foucault’s genealogical analysis of power and resistance as its starting point, the book asks, from below, is there something in the very nature of law – that is, in its discursive and institutional dynamics, in its spatial, material, and temporal coordinates; in its own conceptual categories, claims, mechanisms, and processes – that makes it something more than the mere instrument and armature of power? If those in power can utilize the devices of law and justice to achieve political ends, isn’t there something about these devices that can accommodate fresh articulations? Contending that there are, indeed, discursive, spatial, and temporal resources that can be reconfigured and redeployed as a counter-power and counter-discourse against sovereignty, the book takes as its focus the judicial apparatus; and, more specifically, the concept of the political or show trial. Examining the landmark political trials of Nelson Mandela, Marwan Barghouti, and Bobby Seale, the political trial, it is argued, evinces a crisis of law and sovereignty: a moment where the submerged crisis of sovereignty appears all across the normative structures of the system. The book thus considers the different ways in which a politics of resistance is enabled in the courtroom: as it uncovers a performative logic that contingently conditions, and thus breaks open, law’s otherwise closed normativity.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Introduction
1. Law and Resistance: Beyond a Normative Conception of Law
2. The Political Trial
3. Law and Resistance: Toward a Performative Epistemology of the Political Trial
4. ‘Black man in the white man’s court’
5. Terrorism and Resistance on Trial
6. Slave-Owners as Founding Fathers: Counter-history in the Courtroom
7. Conclusion


More info here

29 May 2020

BOOK: Lori CLUNE, Executing the Rosenbergs. Death and Diplomacy in a Cold War World (Oxdord: University Press, 2019). ISBN: 9780190055592, pp. 282, £16.99

Cover for 

Executing the Rosenbergs
(Source: OUP)

ABOUT THE BOOK

In 1950, Julius and Ethel Rosenberg were arrested for allegedly passing information about the atomic bomb to the Soviet Union, an affair FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover labeled the "crime of the century." Their case became an international sensation, inspiring petitions, letters of support, newspaper editorials, and protests in countries around the world. Nevertheless, the Rosenbergs were executed after years of appeals, making them the only civilians ever put to death for conspiracy-related activities. Yet even after their executions, protests continued. The Rosenberg case quickly transformed into legend, while the media spotlight shifted to their two orphaned sons.
In Executing the Rosenbergs, Lori Clune demonstrates that the Rosenberg case played a pivotal role in the world's perception of the United States. Based on newly discovered documents from the State Department, Clune narrates the widespread dissent against the Rosenberg decision in 80 cities and 48 countries. Even as the Truman and Eisenhower administrations attempted to turn the case into pro-democracy propaganda, U.S. allies and potential allies questioned whether the United States had the moral authority to win the Cold War. Meanwhile, the death of Stalin in 1953 also raised the stakes of the executions; without a clear hero and villain, the struggle between democracy and communism shifted into morally ambiguous terrain.
Transcending questions of guilt or innocence, Clune weaves the case -and its aftermath -into the fabric of the Cold War, revealing its far-reaching global effects. An original approach to one of the most fascinating episodes in Cold War history, Executing the Rosenbergs broadens a quintessentially American story into a global one.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Lori Clune is associate professor of History, California State University, Fresno

TABLE OF CONTENTS

Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Ch 1: Truman
Ch 2: Transition
Ch 3: Eisenhower
Ch 4: Execution
Ch 5: Reverberations
Conclusion
Notes
Abbreviations
Bibliography
Index

More information available here