Genocide: An Anthropological Reader helps to lay a foundation for a ground-breaking anthropology of genocide by gathering together for the first time the seminal texts for learning about and understanding this phenomenon.
Acknowledgements.
. Introduction: Genocide and Anthropology: Alexander Laban Hinton.
Part I: Conceptual Foundations.
1. Genocide. ( Raphaël Lemkin).
2. Text of the UN Genocide Convention.
3. Genocide: Its Political Use in the Twentieth Century. (Leo Kuper).
4. Genocide: A Sociological Perspective. (Helen Fein).
5. Eichmann in Jerusalem: A Report on the Banality of Evil. (Hannah Arendt).
6. Modernity and the Holocaust. (Zygmunt Bauman).
Part II: Genocide, History, and Modernity.
7. Victims of Progress. (John H. Bodley).
8. Culture of Terror – Space of Death: Roger Casement's Putumayo Report and the Explanation of Torture. (Michael Taussig).
9. National Socialist Germany. (Eric R. Wolf).
Part III: Manufacturing Difference and Purification .
10. Ethnic Cleansing : A Metaphor for Our Time? (Akbhar S. Ahmed).
11. Imagined Communities and Real Victims: Self-Determination and Ethnic Cleansing in Yugoslavia. (Robert M. Hayden).
12. A Head for an Eye: Revenge in the Cambodian Genocide. (Alexander Laban Hinton).
13. Dead Certainty: Ethnic Violence in the Era of Globalization: Arjun Appadurai.
Part IV: Coping and Understanding.
14. Fear as a Way of Life. (Linda Green).
15. The Myth of Global Ethnic Conflict. (John R. Bowen).&l£