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After Evil
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Table of Contents

Preface: My Task Introduction: Disavowing Evil 1. The Ideology and Ethics of Human Rights 2. Ways of Winning 3. Living On 4. The Dialectic of Race and Place 5. "Never Again" 6. Still the Jewish Question? 7. Bystanders and Victims 8. Adverse Possession 9. States of "Emergency" 10. Surviving Catastrophe Conclusion: Justice in Time Acknowledgments Notes References Index

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The rare work of a genuine thinker, one who permits no phenomenon, discourse, event, or category of analysis to be assumed or left uninterrogated. After Evil also offers a supremely important and timely argument, one that cuts to the quick of bids for justice in the aftermath of extreme orders of domination, exploitation, and extermination. -- Wendy Brown, University of California, Berkeley

About the Author

Robert Meister is professor of social and political thought at the University of California, Santa Cruz. An active participant in California higher education politics, he is director of the Bruce Initiative on Rethinking Capitalism at UCSC and the author of Political Identity: Thinking Through Marx.

Reviews

Especially rich in exploring the psychological and religious dimensions of human rights practices and discourses, and in listening to those voices, including Islamist ones, that are currently viewed as opposed to human rights, thus helping to render them intelligible. Choice Original, subtle, and provocative. -- Debra L. Delaet ID: International Dialogue After Evil is a large, even magisterial book... [It] aims to document human rights discourse... as an ideology that transcends any particular instance and operates as a symbolic logic, governing not just international law but our own emotional lives...This ambitious and persuasive book charts human rights as an ethical philosophy, a symbolic relation between subjects, and a pervasive ideology of our own relationship to history. -- Daniel Worden Postmodern Culture Robert Meister's central idea is that human rights since the end of the Second World War have provided a limited and problematic response to the phenomenon of political evil-particularly slavery, colonialism, genocide, and ethnic cleansing... The conclusion that Meister drives home is that human rights as they are understood today reconcile us to the given rather than offering grander visions of justice... Human rights as we know them today are explicitly intended to limit the promise of justice-both because the horrors of the twentieth century suggest that such promise might come at too high a cost, and because the promise of justice as greater political and social equality is opposed by the post-Cold War powers. -- Joe Hoover Journal of Intervention and Statebuilding Thoughtful and thought-provoking. -- Claudia Card Holocaust and Genocide Studies [After Evil] contains many brilliant, perceptive and thought provoking insights. Survival

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