Political Torture in Popular Culture argues that the literary, filmic, and popular cultural representation of political torture has been one of the defining dimensions of the torture debate that has taken place in the course of the post-9/11 global war on terrorism. The book argues that cultural representations provide a vital arena in which political meaning is generated, negotiated, and contested. Adams explores whether liberal democracies can ever legitimately perpetrate torture, contrasting assertions that torture can function as a legitimate counterterrorism measure with human rights-based arguments that torture is never morally permissible. He examines the philosophical foundations of pro- and anti-torture positions, looking at their manifestations in a range of literary, filmic and popular cultural texts, and assesses the material effects of these representations. Literary novels, televisual texts, films, and critical theoretical discourse are all covered, focusing on the ways that aesthetic and textual strategies are mobilised to create specific political effects. This book is the first sustained analysis of the torture debate and the role that cultural narratives and representations play within it. It will be of great use to scholars interested in the emerging canon of post-9/11 cultural texts about torture, as well as scholars and students working in politics, history, geography, human rights, international relations, and terrorism studies, literary studies, cultural studies, and film studies.
This volume follows the shift in the representation of torture over the past decade, specifically in documentary, action, and political films.
What does the practice of torture presuppose about human beings and human society? How does one explain a society in which institutional torture persists despite massive changes in government and...
Stripping Bare the Body shows at close hand how terrorism works and how war looks and smells and feels.
31 This concept of a masculinity based on torture is deeply rooted in 24's paranoid style. ... of its era and that it is symptomatic of a larger social-political tendency, as illustrated by other popular cultural texts that advocate the ...
Here is the vivid, unforgettable history of what Mark Danner calls a ''grim age, still infused with the remnant perfume of imperial dreams.''
This book takes another look at politics and popular culture.
In Homer Simpson Goes to Washington: American Politics through Popular Culture, Joseph J. Foy and other contributing scholars offer diverse political perspectives through the framework of popular culture.
20. penfold-Mounce, 'corpses, popular culture and forensic science', p. 8. 21. the term is modelled on 'concentrationary cinema' to speak about films such as Night and Fog (alain resnais, 1955) or the torture in Battle of Algiers (Gillo ...
From Batman Begins to Tom Clancy, How to Justify Torture shows how contemporary culture creates simplified narratives about good guy torturers and bad guy victims, how dangerous this is politically, and what we can do to challenge it.
Political Torture in Popular Culture: The Role of Representations in the Post-9/11 Torture Debate. Abingdon: Routledge. Adams, Douglas. 2016. Life, the Universe and Everything. London: Pan. Adams, Jon , and Edmund Ramsden . 2011.