Book contents
- Striving for Peace through Personal Narratives of Genocide and War
- The Progressive Psychology Book Series
- Striving for Peace through Personal Narratives of Genocide and War
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue: Prehistory, Today, and Tomorrow
- Part I Theoretical Background of the Book
- Chapter 1 Personal Narratives in the Context of Genocide and War
- Chapter 2 Collective Identity, Perceptions of the “Enemy,” and Personal Narratives
- Chapter 3 Coping, or Not, with Genocide and War
- Chapter 4 Conceptualizations of Positive Peace and Reconciliation
- Chapter 5 Personal Narratives of Genocide and War and Their Connections to Peacebuilding or Peace Obstruction
- Part II Personal Narratives in the Contexts of the Holocaust, Israeli–Palestinian Conflict, and Internal Israeli Divisions
- Part III Suggestions for Further Research and Peace Work on the Ground
- References
- Index
Chapter 4 - Conceptualizations of Positive Peace and Reconciliation
from Part I - Theoretical Background of the Book
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 February 2025
- Striving for Peace through Personal Narratives of Genocide and War
- The Progressive Psychology Book Series
- Striving for Peace through Personal Narratives of Genocide and War
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Prologue: Prehistory, Today, and Tomorrow
- Part I Theoretical Background of the Book
- Chapter 1 Personal Narratives in the Context of Genocide and War
- Chapter 2 Collective Identity, Perceptions of the “Enemy,” and Personal Narratives
- Chapter 3 Coping, or Not, with Genocide and War
- Chapter 4 Conceptualizations of Positive Peace and Reconciliation
- Chapter 5 Personal Narratives of Genocide and War and Their Connections to Peacebuilding or Peace Obstruction
- Part II Personal Narratives in the Contexts of the Holocaust, Israeli–Palestinian Conflict, and Internal Israeli Divisions
- Part III Suggestions for Further Research and Peace Work on the Ground
- References
- Index
Summary
Chapter 4 explores conceptualizations and aspects of peacebuilding, reconciliation, and dialogue, and their connection to personal narratives of genocide and war. Our understanding of peacebuilding synthesizes concepts and ideologies offered by major scholars and activists in the world, such as Jane Addams, Martin Luther King, Jr., and Leo Tolstoy. Furthermore, it emphasizes ideological nonviolence, creativity, and the use of personal narratives and Buberian-based dialogue in peacebuilding and sustainability. This chapter adds the final “piece of the mosaic” of the academic framework for understanding the roles that personal narratives of massive social-political trauma can play in sustainable peacebuilding and reconciliation (or in peace obstruction processes), presented in the preceding chapters.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025