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The Afterword will draw together the main findings of the case studies presented in the volume. It will revisit the ways that victim/perpetrator binaries are shaped by political contexts and legal processes. We will also consider the influences of social media on narratives as a way to explore the implications of binary constructions for the field of post-conflict studies. We understand that it is easy to succumb to despair and apathy in the face of mass atrocity and the power of narrative frames to reignite it. Against this inclination, we demonstrate that there is hope to be found in creative and constructive methods of narrative intervention.
The Introduction will explore discourses surrounding violence, especially the articulation of perpetrators, victims, heroes, and bystanders (whether they be individuals, groups, or institutions). In the aftermath of mass atrocity, identities shift. Many jockey for the victim position. So-called perpetrators during the conflict may find themselves pronounced heroes, or erstwhile heroes may find themselves storied as villains. The newly assigned roles become truth as quickly as the old roles are discarded. These shifting descriptions of characters, events, and roles reveal sentiment on the ground, telling us a great deal about which regime is truly in power and whether groups in conflict may soon retaliate. We will make the argument that discourses are reflective as well as predictive of violence and that peacebuilding requires inquiring even into our own participation in these stereotypes, regardless of the ends we think they will achieve. The argument that exclusion through language is violence will be incorporated into the anthology’s larger framework. We will then situate each essay’s contribution in the larger themes of the book.
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