Over much of its rule, the regime of Hafez al-Asad and his successor Bashar al-Asad deployed violence on a massive scale to maintain its grip on political power. In this book, Salwa Ismail examines the rationalities and mechanisms of governing through violence. In a detailed and compelling account, Ismail shows how the political prison and the massacre, in particular, developed as apparatuses of government, shaping Syrians' political subjectivities, defining their understanding of the terms of rule and structuring their relations and interactions with the regime and with one another. Examining ordinary citizens' everyday life experiences and memories of violence across diverse sites, from the internment camp and the massacre to the family and school, The Rule of Violence demonstrates how practices of violence, both in their routine and spectacular forms, fashioned Syrians' affective life, inciting in them feelings of humiliation and abjection, and infusing their lived environment with dread and horror. This form of rule is revealed to be constraining of citizens' political engagement, while also demanding of their action.
Author(s): Salwa Ismail
Series: Cambridge Middle East Studies
Edition: 1
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Year: 2018
Language: English
Commentary: TruePDF
Pages: 243
Tags: Syria: Politics And Government: 1971–2000; Syria: Politics And Government: 2000 –; Political Violence: Syria: History: 20th Century; Political Violence: Syria: History: 21st Century; Political Science: Government: International
Cover
The Rule of Violence
Cambridge Middle East Studies - Series page
The Rule of Violence - Title page
Copyright page
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
Introduction: The Government of Violence
1 - Violence as a Modality of Government in Syria
2 - Authoritarian Government, the Shadow State and Political Subjectivities
3 - Memories of Life under Dictatorship: The Everyday of Ba‘thist Syria
4 - Memories of Violence: Hama 1982
5 - The Performativity of Violence and ‘Emotionalities of Rule’ in the Syrian Uprising
Conclusion: The Rule of Violence – Formations of Civil War
Postscript
References
Index
Other Books in the Series - Series page