Violence and Nonviolence: Conceptual Excursions into Phantom Opposites

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University of Toronto Press, Jan 1, 2019 - Philosophy - 360 pages

Through an original and close reading of the key literature regarding both revolutionary violence and nonviolence, this book collapses the widely-assumed concepts of violence and nonviolence as mutually exclusive. By revealing that violence and nonviolence are braided concepts arising from human action, Peyman Vahabzadeh submits that in many cases the actions deemed to be either violent or nonviolent might actually produce outcomes that are not essentially different.

Vahabzadeh offers a conceptual phenomenology of the key thinkers and theorists of both revolutionary violence and various approaches to nonviolence. Arguing that violence is inseparable from civilizations, Violence and Nonviolence concludes by making a number of original conceptualizations regarding the relationship between violence and nonviolence, exploring the possibility of a nonviolent future and proposing to understand the relationship between the two concepts as concentric, not opposites.

 

Contents

Back to Violence
3
1 Towards a Radical Phenomenology of Non Violence
20
2 Deworlding Reworlding Phenomenal Violence
49
3 Acts of Liberation
75
4 On Liberations Magical Moment
102
Interregnum
157
5 Logistical Necessity and Pragmatic Non violence
162
Peace and the Question of Justice
180
7 Ethics of Nonviolence
200
8 The Conflictual Politics of Nonviolence
238
Not Opposites Concentric
286
Bibliography
319
Index
331
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About the author (2019)

Peyman Vahabzadeh is professor of Sociology at University of Victoria.