Reparations and the Human: A Lecture by David L. Eng
Sep 201128 | ||
6:30p.m. - 8:00p.m. |
A/P/A Institute
41-51 East 11th Street
7th Floor
New York, New York, 10003
United States
This presentation explores the relationship between political and psychic genealogies of reparation. Reparation is a key term in political theory, but it is also a central concept in psychoanalysis (specifically object relations theory), yet the two are rarely discussed in relation to one another. In this talk, David L. Eng will explore how political and psychic genealogies of reparation might supplement one another in theories of the human and discourses of human rights, while helping us to understand better the social and psychic limits of repairing war, violence, colonialism, and genocide. Specifically, Eng will trace a global genealogy of reparations from John Locke to Melanie Klein to twentieth-century Asia in order to rethink the concept’s transnational significance and the possibility of “racial reparation” in context of the trans-Pacific: the internment of Japanese Americans by the U.S. government during World War II; the atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki ending that war; and contemporary legal claims by “comfort women,” young girls and women from Japan’s colonial empire conscripted by the imperial army into sexual slavery.
For more information, please visit http://www.csgsnyu.org/2011/08/reparations-and-the-human-david-l-eng/
APA_Institute . Última actualización Sep 16, 2011 10:25 a.m.