Historians of Asia on Political Violence
Type de publication et date de parutionOuvrage
Paru(e) le

Historians of Asia on Political Violence

Direction d'ouvrage

Anne Cheng & Sanchit Kumar

Lien(s) externe(s) Collège de France
ISBN 13

Cheng, Anne et Kumar, Sanchit (dir.). Historians of Asia on Political Violence. [En ligne]. Paris : Collège de France, 2021. (Coll. « Institut des civilisations »). URL : http://books.openedition.org/cdf/6183. DOI :10.4000/books.cdf.11180. (Consulté le 17 mai 2021)

Ce volume rassemble les contributions d’un colloque qui s’est tenu au Collège de France en 2019. Contribution de Michel Bonnin (EHESS, CCJ-CECMC) : “Mao’s specific brand of political violence”.

L’ouvrage est en téléchargement libre sur OpenEdition Books.

Présentation

In the general opinion, Asia as a whole tends to be represented (and more often than not, to represent itself) as devoid of violence: look at Indian “non-violence”, Chinese Taoist “non-action”, Confucian “harmony”, Buddhist “love for peace” or Japanese “Zen philosophy”… This may fill the shelves of “Oriental wisdom” sections in our bookshops, but most historians do not buy into this kind of “feel good” projections and are acutely aware that any society whatsoever, wherever it is located, teems with violence, and that violence is part and parcel of any kind of polity. Furthermore, the political violence which is the topic of this volume is not just about war, it can take on very diverse forms, including, as will be shown by some of the articles presented here, iconic vandalism, distorted modes of interpretation, warped forms of ideological discourse, collective amnesia and negationism.

The present volume is the second of the “Myriades d’Asies” series inaugurated with India-China: Intersecting Universalities. Just as the preceding one, it is a collection of articles resulting from an international conference organised by the Chair of Chinese Intellectual History in June 2019. As a reflection of the Collège de France spirit of public service intent on making knowledge available to all for free, all the volumes of the series are published online and in open access. Our hope is that these articles, written by eminent historians of Asia and from very different viewpoints which cut across vast expanses of time and space, will lead readers and researchers alike to reflect further on the multiple faces of political violence, as well as their infinite complexities, so as to avoid giving in to ideological and judgmental binaries that are the common junk food for non-thought. This seems to be increasingly essential today since the 21st century is supposed to be the century of Asia.

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