Lexington Books
Pages: 274
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-0-7391-8473-8 • Hardback • October 2014 • $126.00 • (£97.00)
978-1-4985-0630-4 • Paperback • March 2017 • $56.99 • (£44.00)
978-0-7391-8474-5 • eBook • October 2014 • $54.00 • (£42.00)
Susan J. Henders is associate professor of political science at York University.
Lily Cho is associate professor of English at York University.
1. Human Rights and the Arts in Global Asia: Conceptualizing Contexts
Lily Cho and Susan J. Henders
Part I Freedoms and Democracies
2. Love the Future: Ai Weiwei and Art for Human Rights
Alice Ming Wai Jim
3. “September”: Seeing Religion and Rights in Burma
Alicia Turner
Part II War and Atrocity
4. Impacts and Legacies of War on Human Rights: Perspectives from Dương Thu Hương’s Novel Without a Name
Van Nguyen-Marshall
5. Incendiary Material: Ethnicity and the Sri Lankan Civil Conflict in Anil's Ghost and Wilting Laughter
Arun Nedra Rodrigo
Part III Livelihoods, Place, and Ecologies
6. Literary Lament of a Death Foretold: Tibetan Writers on the Forced Settlement of Herders
Françoise Robin
7. Reading Peasant Rights to Livelihood in Umar Kayam’s “Sri Sumarah” and Bawuk”
Mary M. Young
8. The River, the People and the State(s): Padma Nadir Majhi as a Meditation on Ecology and Human Rights
Afsan Chowdhury
Part IV Minorities, Nations, States, and Empires
9. Abuse and Its Aftermath: Kim Saryang’s “Into the Light,” Joy Kogawa’s Obasan, and Yuasa Katsue’s “Red Dates”
Theodore W. Goossen
10. Chasing the Monster: The Representation of Korean Residents in Japan and Human Rights in Oshima Nagisa’s Film Death by Hanging
Jooyeon Rhee
11. Human Rights and Human Wrongs: Reading Shama Futehally’s Reaching Bombay Central and Noor Zaheer’s “A Life in Transit”
Arun P. Mukherjee
12. Intersectionality, Hybridity, and the Minority Rights Subject: The Macanese of Macau in Literature, Film, and Law
Susan J. Henders
Part V Migrations, Transnationalisms, Universalisms
13. Human Rights and the Poetics of “Migritude”: South Asian Diasporic Spoken Word
Sailaja Krishnamurti
14. Universal Rights and Separate Universes: Local/National Identities, Global Power, and the Modeling and Representing of Human Rights in Indonesian Performance Arts
Michael Bodden
Part VI Afterword
15. Confucius Institutes, Human Rights, and Global Asia
Lily Cho
Human Rights and the Arts is a valuable and welcome contribution to the growing scholarship on human rights issues and debates in Asia. . . .This volume shows not only that art can be a powerful tool for artists and activists to depict human rights violations and call for justice and recognition, especially important in non-democratic countries, but that art can be an excellent window for students and scholars who want to understand how human rights norms, contestations, and problems are experienced by individual citizens in Asia. One would hope that this volume would inspire further studies that probe deeper into different forms of art, the relationship between art and activism in different Asian countries, and the reception of these art works in Asia.
— Pacific Affairs
Using art as the template, this edited collection wonderfully highlights both the global and the local contexts of human rights. In earlier advancing a notion of “indigenization” I have long felt that global values and indigenous concerns should be understood as mutually constitutive. The local does not displace agreed global standards or excuse violations but it may shape how we promote and practice human rights. The present volume takes this to heart. It appreciates that the human rights protests and expressions embedded in works of art call us to a higher global standard, while at the same time expressing local indigenous values and meaning. Art and artists have long been central to the effort to illuminate the collective and individual responses to political, social and other forms of repression across the Asian region. By bringing these voices together this work fills an important gap in the scholarly literature. The editors are to be commended for their intellectual contribution in organizing this diverse literature and bringing to life the notion of human rights as a diverse discourse.
— Michael C. Davis, University of Hong Kong
Human Rights and the Arts sweeps in where others working at the nexus of human rights and the humanities have not yet tread, offering exhilarating readings of texts that, in their assiduous breadth of genre and geography, propel the emerging field of literature and human rights into urgent new territories. Courageously intervening in the Asian values debate, this volume (with its brilliant companion anthology) exactingly delineates the limits of the law in the human rights project, shifting attention to how art and literature from both ‘center’ and ‘margins’ reveal the multiple contexts for human rights violations and claims, and how these contexts are crucial to understanding both construction and function of such claims within what the authors meticulously demonstrate to be the shifting landscapes of a truly global and, still, always local Asia.
— Elizabeth Goldberg, Babson College