Women Witnessing Terror: Testimony and the Cultural Politics of Human Rights

Front Cover
Fordham University Press, 2005 - Law - 286 pages

A model of engaged scholarship, this book examines
first-person testimonials by women who have survived
abuse and atrocity in zones of conflict and terror.
Drawing on a wide range of sources and settings, including
genocide, state terror, ethnic cleansing, and war, Anne Cubili
uses survivor testimony as theoretical invention, placing personal
witness in dialogue with work by philosophers, literary theorists,
and others who study the space between victim and survivor,
ethical witness and silenced observer, male and female.
This nuanced example of ethical criticism demonstrates forcefully
how ethical witnessing--listening to the voices of survivors--
reformulates the language of human rights and enhances its
ability to intervene against violence and oppression.

References to this book

About the author (2005)

Anne Cubilie is a consultant in gender, human rights, and education at the United Nations.