Life And Words by Veena Das
Violence and the Descent into the Ordinary
An anthropological exploration of how collective and intimate violence become woven into everyday life in urban India, especially in the aftermath of Partition and the 1984 anti-Sikh pogroms. Drawing on long-term ethnography, it traces how pain, memory, and speech circulate within families and neighborhoods, how the state and medical institutions engage suffering, and how ethical life is remade through ordinary practices. Rather than treating trauma as a singular rupture, it shows how wounds are absorbed into daily routines through silence, testimony, and care, reconfiguring social relations. The analysis probes the politics of recognition, the limits of language, and the complex work of witnessing.
The 17010th greatest book of all time
- Published
- 2006
- Nationality
- Indian
- Length
- Medium
- Pages
- 280-320
- Original Language
- English
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- Alternate Titles
- None
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- 1484th on Our Users' Honorable Mention Favorite Books of All Time (The Greatest Books Users)
