Description
About the Author
Michael Newman is Emeritus Professor of Politics at London Metropolitan University and now teaches at New York University in London. His previous books include Humanitarian Intervention: Confronting the Contradictions (Hurst 2009), Socialism: A Very Short Introduction (Oxford University Press, 2005), Ralph Miliband and the Politics of the New Left (Merlin Press, 2002), and Democracy, Sovereignty and the European Union (Hurst, 1996).
Reviews
' As a meditation on the shifting moral, intellectual and artistic compass of writers confronting oppression, this book is illuminating. ' -- Times Literary Supplement
'Newman has opened up new vistas for studying the multi-dimensional nature of transitional justice . . . his book breaks new ground in demonstrating how political scientists can view historical events with an ideological basis through the prism of literary giants.'
'This book is highly original. It is, in effect, literary criticism written by a political scientist, albeit one who is deeply sensitive to the art of his subjects. All were on the left, and all suffered greatly from varying degrees of attraction to and revulsion from violence, and from the pain of disillusionment. Newman's engagement with them is compassionate and lucid.' * Bill Bowring, Professor of Law, Birkbeck, University of London *
'Here is something genuinely new and refreshing. In "Six Authors in Search of Justice", an experienced analyst of peacebuilding looks at the unfamiliar light that novelists can throw on the familiar issue of justice. Aided by six great novelists and Professor Newman, many readers will change their view of what makes for justice as societies change and why injustices persist.' * Dan Smith, Director, Stockholm International Peace Research Institute *
'Michael Newman's book offers a welcome gust of freshness in the expanding library of transitional justice literature. Although poets, playwrights, novelists and filmmakers have been the most piercing documenters of political transition through the past century, scholars of peacebuilding and transitional justice have largely ignored the profundity of their contribution to our field. Newman makes the sagacious choice of focusing on six towering novelists from Europe, Africa and Latin America who bear witness to the brutal legacy of injustice and tyranny in their countries. He reveals the six novelists' nuanced and changing views of justice as each of them experiences the unfolding dynamics of turbulent transitions. Transitional justice often gets trapped within the constraints of politics and the confines of law, and conveys static theories of justice. Newman's book opens a window of precious insight into the fluidity and multidimensionality of our conceptions of justice and injustice. He points to the vital importance of addressing the cultural and invisible layers of injustice.' * Rama Mani, Senior Research Associate, Centre for International Studies, University of Oxford; author of Beyond Retribution: Seeking Justice in the Shadows of War *
Book Information
ISBN 9781849046329
Author Michael Newman
Format Hardback
Page Count 256
Imprint C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd
Publisher C Hurst & Co Publishers Ltd