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Darker than Midnight: Fear, Vulnerability, and Terror Making in Urban Burma (Myanmar)

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Darker than Midnight: Fear, Vulnerability, and Terror Making in Urban Burma (Myanmar)
Author(s)Skidmore, Monique
AbstractThe Burmese military State constructs fear and vulnerability among its citizenry through the strategic use of political violence. Fear is inherently temporal and, unlike despair, requires that one have the ability to envisage alternatives to a future of complete domination. Burmese people strive not to express fear, and the anthropologist’s articulation of fear contrasts with the silence that fear engenders among them. In this article I reflect on strategies for the ethical collection of experiences of fear in situations where suppressing or denying fear is the most common survival strategy.
IssueNo1
Pages5-21
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceAmerican Ethnologist
VolumeNo30
PubDateFebruary 2003
ISBN_ISSN0094-0496

War, Violence, and Hegemony

  • Ethnic Suppression and Genocide
  • Exploitation and Human Rights
  • Terrorism and War
  • Violence and Aggression


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