04803oam 2200757I 450 991082898430332120240131144356.01-135-12000-51-283-97273-50-203-07538-21-135-12001-310.4324/9780203075388 (CKB)2670000000325561(EBL)1114655(OCoLC)827208969(SSID)ssj0000822687(PQKBManifestationID)12425273(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000822687(PQKBWorkID)10761036(PQKB)11019916(MiAaPQ)EBC1114655(Au-PeEL)EBL1114655(CaPaEBR)ebr10650249(CaONFJC)MIL428523(OCoLC)826065148(OCoLC)826712158(FINmELB)ELB133569(EXLCZ)99267000000032556120180706d2013 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrThe war in Darfur reclaiming Sudanese history /Anders HastrupLondon ;New York :Routledge,2013.1 online resource (177 p.)Routledge studies in Middle Eastern society ;1Description based upon print version of record.1-138-92254-4 0-415-52487-3 Includes bibliographical references and index.Cover; The War in Darfur: Reclaiming Sudanese History; Copyright; Contents; Acknowledgements; A Note on Translation and Transcription; 1. Introduction: Modes of Explanation and Production of History; Outline of the Book; 2. Studying War and Displacement in Sudan: Framing the Field; Rereading Sudanese History; Internal Displacement in Sudan: A View from the Capital; Sudan: A Profound Intermediacy; Anthropology and the Civil Wars in Sudan; Access and "Windows of Opportunity"; "Back" to the South; 3. Designs for Darfur: Mirror Images; The Sultanate; The Sultanate and the Arabs in Darfur"A Truly Characteristic Arab Message"The Mahdiyya: Darfur and a New State; Dar Masalit: On the Margins of the Margins; The Native Administration; Darfur in Independent Sudan; A New Order; The Hardest Fact; 4. Deep Listening: Introducing the Project "Darfurian Voices"; Survey Types and Methodologies; Choosing the Respondents; Video Panels; Sudanese Arabic; 5. Into the Camps: Inscriptions and Depictions; The Spill-Over of the Darfur War; The Camps and the Humanitarian Situation; Arrival; Women's Voices; Bodily Inscriptions; Bringing It All Back "Home"; Displaying Darfur; Depicting DarfurFleeing RecalledEnduring Plot Shapes; 6. Arabs Remembered: Locals and Foreigners; The Arab-Masalit Wars; Causative Meanings; The Chadian Arabs; Arabs in a Wider Sense; Three Types of Arabs; The Arab-Zaghawa Conflict; Long- and Short-Term Memories; The Legibility of the State; The Missing Rebellion; 7. Reinventing the Rebellion: Causes and Chronologies; The Chronology of the Rebellion; Exclusions; The Darfur Peace Agreement Seen from the Camps; Nas Adbul Wahid; Nas Khalil Ibrahim; The Need for Unity; The Presence of the Absence of Peace; "Marginalization" Discovered; Fixation and Mobility8. Returns: Circumscribed FuturesEducation as a Ticket Out; Daoud Bolad: A New School; International Justice; The Hakura; Nation Building; 9. Conclusion: Congestion and Marginalization; Congested National Identities; The Multiplying Marginality; Postscript; Notes; Bibliography; IndexNo other crisis in Africa has received as much attention in the West during the past 10 years as the war in Darfur, yet the underlying complexities of the war and the background to the crisis remains poorly understood by scholars, activists and aid workers. This anthropological study of the war in Darfur explores the personal experience of war from the perspective of those refugees who have fled from it and puts forward potential solutions to the conflict. Drawing on ethnographic research carried out in the refugee camps of neighbouring eastern Chad,The War in Darfur: ReclaRoutledge Studies in Middle Eastern SocietyRefugeesSudanDarfurInterviewsRefugeesChadInterviewsGenocideSudanDarfurEthnic conflictSudanDarfurSudanHistoryDarfur Conflict, 2003-RefugeesRefugeesGenocideEthnic conflict962.404/3Hastrup Anders.1653248MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910828984303321The war in Darfur4004436UNINA