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The State of Human Rights

Historical Genealogies, Political Controversies, and Cultural Imaginaries

Herausgeber: Schmidt, Kerstin | Falk, Jasmin | Sassen, Saskia

Publikationen der Bayerischen Amerika-Akademie / Publications of the Bavarian American Academy, Bd. 22

2020

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Abstract

Since their proclamation in the 1948 ‘Universal Declaration of Human Rights’, human rights have become a dominant Language in controversies over ethics around the globe and a normative basis for concepts of a just society and ideas of the public good. This concerns a variety of issues, from slavery and warfare through fights over indigenous rights and disputes over preserving the heritage of minorities to current conflicts over asylum law and the status of refugees. What is the state of human rights both within and beyond the boundaries of the nation state? How can we take into account the significance of cultural texts in envisioning and critically reflecting the 'state of human rights’? This book offers interdisciplinary perspectives from literary and cultural studies, theater, photography, history, political science, philosophy, sociology, and law, looking at historical controversies on human rights as well as at their current political, social, and imagined state(s).

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Zwischenüberschrift Seite Aktion Preis
Cover Cover
Titel III
Imprint IV
Table of Contents V
Kerstin Schmidt - Human Rights at the Border: A Political Introduction 1
Saskia Sassen - Foreword: Beyond People? A Human Rights Project that Engages Systems 13
Heiner Bielefeldt - Safeguarding Preconditions of Meaningful Interaction: A Critical Justification of Universal Rights 19
Micheline Ishay - Human Rights in the Age of Populism 33
Benjamin Gregg - The Human Rights State: Advancing Justice Through Political Imagination 47
Yael Schacher - Exclusions and Exceptions: The History of Asylum in the U.S 71
Florian Tatschner - “We Seek Our Basic, God-Given Rights as Human Beings”: Embodiment, Hope, and Utopia in the Delano Grape Strike 85
Peter T. Wendel - The U.S. Constitution and the ‚Universal Declaration of Human Rights‘: A Comparative Approach 107
Robin Leick - The Fundamental Rights Regime of the European Union: Historical Developments and Future Challenges 129
Sonali Perera - Between Revolution and Revisionism: Human Rights and Antigone’s Ghosts 149
Crystal Parikh - “I Haven’t Come Back… I’ve Come Here”: American Innocence and the Refugee Child 163
Katharina Matuschek - “People in Prisons Are Still People”: Reclaiming Humanity Through Autobiographical Prison Writing 179
Sunčica Klaas - A Crime Against Humanity: Prefiguring Human Rights in Solomon Northup’s ‚Twelve Years A Slave‘ 193
Gerd Hurm - ‚The Family of Man‘ (1848/1955): Feminist Foremothers, Women’s Rights, and Human Rights 209
Jane Lydon - The Universal Language of Photography? UNESCO’s ‚Human Rights Exhibition‘ in Australia, 1951 235
Greta Olson with Janna Wessels - Imag(in)ing Human Rights: Deindividualizing, Victimizing, and Universalizing Images of Refugees in the United States and Germany 249
Notes on Contributors 265
Backcover Backcover