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The Crime of Writing: narratives and shared meanings in criminal cases in Baathist Syria.

(IFPO, CP38)

著者名:
Ghazzal, Zouhair
出版元:
IFPO
頁数:
572p photos.
刊行年:
2015
ISBN:
9782351597101

Islamic law -- Crime -- Syria -- Sociology -- 1990-

This book gives a unique portrait of Syrian society through the workings of its criminal records in the three decades prior to outbreak of the civil war in 2011. Based on actual crime files from Aleppo and Idlib, in addition to extensive interviews with criminal detaineers, lawyer, judges, and court experts, this study manages an in-depth account of Syria under the Baathist rule of the two Asad regimes.


Chapter 1. The political economy of crime -- 35
The civic foundations of the new post‑Ottoman legal order -- 35
This is not good enough to stay -- 46
Criminalizing the economy -- 52
Bailouts of so‑called credit collectors -- 59
What happened to the personality? -- 71
The old sultanic order and the new civic virtues -- 79
Why the demonstrability of crime has become that importan -- 83
The blueprint of undecipherable statistics -- 91
Chapter 2. What would stand as enough evidence? -- 101
What is enough evidence? -- 105
The aura of witnessing -- 108
Memory, time, and forgetting -- 110
Between performance and morality: why direct interrogation is all that matters -- 110
The crime of writing The unspoken honor -- 115
The unveiling of the mute ground of discourse -- 117
Wither Oedipus? -- 131
Chapter 3. There is no crime where there is madness -- 143
What happened? -- 145
The insane shepherd‑who‑writes -- 148
The criminal case as a legal artifact -- 161
Is he competent to stand trial? -- 167
Was he insane? -- 176
My client is known to be an idiot -- 177
Writing insanity -- 179
The accused is now in a borderline state -- 183
Common understandings and misunderstandings -- 188
Chapter 4. Auto-biographies: Self and Other in Confessional Criminal Narratives -- 195
Matters of fact -- 198
Autobiographical confessions -- 201
Crime or suicide? -- 210
Anatomy of a confession: the unwritten law of abuse -- 222
I admit that I was abusive towards my teenage daughter, but does that make me look like a criminal worthy of incarceration? -- 22
All those silent observers -- 233
The father’s gaze and the daughter’s guilt -- 239
Chapter 5. The death penalty, torture, and due process -- 245
So that they may become a lesson to others: why the death penalty still matters -- 245
When does torture become commonplace? -- 248
The death penalty is too little for people like that -- 251
Let’s keep everything in secret -- 256
You must become independent -- 268
Torture and its limits -- 273
Torture as the obscene supplement of Law -- 293
There is something wrong with my wife’s sexuality -- 295
That which we dare not speak about -- 299
Strong mother, weak son‑in‑law -- 303
The semantics of love and sexuality -- 304
They spoke too much, or too little -- 306
Selective use of language, key‑wording, and language games -- 310
That immoral thing -- 311
When the Law enjoys itself -- 312
Chapter 6. The problem of recipiency in honor killings -- 317
From “murder” to “honorable killing” -- 320
My husband and my mother were not lovers -- 324
Rethinking recipiency in honor killings -- 329
Negotiating sexual freedom -- 336
Struggling with motive -- 337
Swingers: unconventional hedonistic lives, and the exchange of sexual partners -- 339
The price of sexual freedom -- 340
Oedipus unbound -- 341
Documenting the indescribable -- 349
Triple rapes -- 352
Denying the facts, finding the truth -- 359
Chapter 7. When punishment is left to the judiciary: Kin wars between shared meanings and law -- 365
How did you do such a thing? -- 368
Are you kin affiliated? -- 371
Potential victims -- 378
The crime of writing Parsing the narrative threads -- 380
Relatives are always a surprise -- 382
Murder and the dynamics of kinship -- 384
Witnessing the everydayness of kin, violence, and sexuality -- 386
Wouldn’t it have been simpler? -- 387
The kin who surprise us -- 388
Chapter 8. A danger to society: they must therefore all disappear -- 391
Arson and matricide: the daughter rehabilitates the law -- 394
The violence of the mute woman and the power of speech -- 401
The emergence of the criminal spectator -- 407
I tempted him with some money -- 412
I saw my divorcée lying down with her new fiancé -- 421
Shameful sex in the vicinity of the husband’s corpse -- 425
Tales of sexual jouissance -- 430
Chapter 9. The place of third parties in land crimes -- 435
Honor, kin, land, and modernity -- 436
The landed aristocracy -- 439
Anatomy of a murder scene -- 441
The return of the repressed -- 444
The mantle of the father -- 447
Right‑of‑passage -- 456
Typology of a police report regarding the relatedness of the assailants: how local relations of power are interpreted and processed -- 459
Keying into the kinship database -- 461
Mitigated (cross‑)examinations -- 461
The political economy of land and crime -- 464
They had abused of their relationship to society -- 471
Murder always implies a third party -- 473
Chapter 10. Photoshopping the president: Men at work in the age of socialism -- 479
A crook should know how and when to quit -- 479
A crook who went too far -- 489
Accounts, reflexivity, and indexical expressions -- 499
Why is such a metamorphosis important? -- 500
Petty thefts and pernicious crack habits -- 510
How dangerous were they? -- 518
Chapter 11. Le moment de conclure -- 525
Relevant penal code articles -- 541

No.
34759
価格:
9,245円


2024年 11月 21日 27887210 リクエスト (2015年 06月 19日 より)

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