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How reading can shape us as literary, cognizant, and ethical human beings, namely witnesses

The juridico-symbolic violence, which includes or excludes the survivors of the Holocaust and wartime rape in Bosnia from the legal category of a witness, shapes the reader's bodily engagement with texts. The MA program of Gender and Women's studies and the institutional networks with the English an...

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Main Author: Yamasaki, Yukiko
Format: Thesis
Published: AUC Knowledge Fountain 2009
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access_status_str Open Access
author Yamasaki, Yukiko
author_browse Yamasaki, Yukiko
author_facet Yamasaki, Yukiko
author_sort Yamasaki, Yukiko
collection Thesis
dc_rights_str_mv The author retains all rights with regard to copyright. The author certifies that written permission from the owner(s) of third-party copyrighted matter included in the thesis, dissertation, paper, or record of study has been obtained. The author further certifies that IRB approval has been obtained for this thesis, or that IRB approval is not necessary for this thesis. Insofar as this thesis, dissertation, paper, or record of study is an educational record as defined in the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) (20 USC 1232g), the author has granted consent to disclosure of it to anyone who requests a copy.
description The juridico-symbolic violence, which includes or excludes the survivors of the Holocaust and wartime rape in Bosnia from the legal category of a witness, shapes the reader's bodily engagement with texts. The MA program of Gender and Women's studies and the institutional networks with the English and Comparative Literature and Law department at AUC have facilitated my reading of three main texts: a novel about wartime rape in Bosnia S.: A story about the Balkans, a particular world map rendering of the former Yugoslavia, and the judicial opinions found in a landmark case regarding wartime rape in Bosnia, Kunarac. My work aligns with these texts in their crying out for an interdisciplinary approach that can cast light on the subjectivity, fluidity, and uncertainty of the witness. This thesis documents how my bodily engagement with the texts provides access to a constellation of theoretical and methodological vantage pointsâ my self-reflections and witnessing of others vis-Ã -vis the Other of oneself. My three sensibilitiesâ passion for the novel S., confusion for the world map, and alienation for the legal document Kunaracâ are examined and woven through the discussion. My analysis centers on how a literary critic becomes a rhetorical witness who is simultaneously 1) situated not just in a particular frame of literary and textual spaces, but also across various genres and times and 2) reflecting, resisting, and subverting legal notions of witness. While trying to enter into spaces of identification with both legally identified and unidentified witnesses, the rhetorical witness is, as yet, grounded amidst the hegemonic legal culture. This hegemony, in turn, yields political intents, as well as, aesthetic and ethical effects upon the rhetorical witness. The rhetorical witness develops discursive strategies for managing the complex and ideologically challenging potential of justice rendering and gender justice incurred by these texts. Texts reshape political, legal, and cultural life of readers, but empathic reading of texts also reconfigures the identity of the self-as-reader into the rhetorical witness. Concluding thoughts are proposed on the ethics of reading, and the space left for the rhetorical witness and her contribution to ethical dialogue.
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license_str Other — see source repository
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publishDate 2009
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spelling oai:fount.aucegypt.edu:etds-1931 How reading can shape us as literary, cognizant, and ethical human beings, namely witnesses Yamasaki, Yukiko The juridico-symbolic violence, which includes or excludes the survivors of the Holocaust and wartime rape in Bosnia from the legal category of a witness, shapes the reader's bodily engagement with texts. The MA program of Gender and Women's studies and the institutional networks with the English and Comparative Literature and Law department at AUC have facilitated my reading of three main texts: a novel about wartime rape in Bosnia S.: A story about the Balkans, a particular world map rendering of the former Yugoslavia, and the judicial opinions found in a landmark case regarding wartime rape in Bosnia, Kunarac. My work aligns with these texts in their crying out for an interdisciplinary approach that can cast light on the subjectivity, fluidity, and uncertainty of the witness. This thesis documents how my bodily engagement with the texts provides access to a constellation of theoretical and methodological vantage pointsâ my self-reflections and witnessing of others vis-Ã -vis the Other of oneself. My three sensibilitiesâ passion for the novel S., confusion for the world map, and alienation for the legal document Kunaracâ are examined and woven through the discussion. My analysis centers on how a literary critic becomes a rhetorical witness who is simultaneously 1) situated not just in a particular frame of literary and textual spaces, but also across various genres and times and 2) reflecting, resisting, and subverting legal notions of witness. While trying to enter into spaces of identification with both legally identified and unidentified witnesses, the rhetorical witness is, as yet, grounded amidst the hegemonic legal culture. This hegemony, in turn, yields political intents, as well as, aesthetic and ethical effects upon the rhetorical witness. The rhetorical witness develops discursive strategies for managing the complex and ideologically challenging potential of justice rendering and gender justice incurred by these texts. Texts reshape political, legal, and cultural life of readers, but empathic reading of texts also reconfigures the identity of the self-as-reader into the rhetorical witness. Concluding thoughts are proposed on the ethics of reading, and the space left for the rhetorical witness and her contribution to ethical dialogue. 2009-02-01T08:00:00Z thesis application/pdf https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/932 https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/1931/viewcontent/2009GWSTYukikoYamasaki.pdf The author retains all rights with regard to copyright. The author certifies that written permission from the owner(s) of third-party copyrighted matter included in the thesis, dissertation, paper, or record of study has been obtained. The author further certifies that IRB approval has been obtained for this thesis, or that IRB approval is not necessary for this thesis. Insofar as this thesis, dissertation, paper, or record of study is an educational record as defined in the Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) (20 USC 1232g), the author has granted consent to disclosure of it to anyone who requests a copy. Theses and Dissertations AUC Knowledge Fountain
spellingShingle Yamasaki, Yukiko
How reading can shape us as literary, cognizant, and ethical human beings, namely witnesses
title How reading can shape us as literary, cognizant, and ethical human beings, namely witnesses
title_full How reading can shape us as literary, cognizant, and ethical human beings, namely witnesses
title_fullStr How reading can shape us as literary, cognizant, and ethical human beings, namely witnesses
title_full_unstemmed How reading can shape us as literary, cognizant, and ethical human beings, namely witnesses
title_short How reading can shape us as literary, cognizant, and ethical human beings, namely witnesses
title_sort how reading can shape us as literary cognizant and ethical human beings namely witnesses
url https://fount.aucegypt.edu/etds/932
https://fount.aucegypt.edu/context/etds/article/1931/viewcontent/2009GWSTYukikoYamasaki.pdf
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