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
- 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
- Chapter 9 Personal Narratives of Genocide and Intractable War
- Chapter 10 Personal Narratives of Genocide and Intractable War
- References
- Index
Chapter 10 - Personal Narratives of Genocide and Intractable War
Concrete Ideas for Peacebuilding and Reconciliation
from Part III - Suggestions for Further Research and Peace Work on the Ground
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
- 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
- Chapter 9 Personal Narratives of Genocide and Intractable War
- Chapter 10 Personal Narratives of Genocide and Intractable War
- References
- Index
Summary
In Chapter 10, we advance concrete ideas that peace and social activists are invited to adopt when interested in using personal narratives of genocide and/or intractable war in intergroup processes of sustainable peacebuilding and reconciliation. Our suggestions draw on conceptualizations discussed in the book, as well as recommendations derived from previous on-the-ground experiences in such contexts. Our proposals focus on the following four arenas: (1) intergroup methods for moving from narratives of distancing to narratives that encourage peacebuilding; (2) ways to deal with social forgetting and “dangerous memories” of genocide and intractable war in peacebuilding efforts; (3) how to deal with fake news, denial of atrocities, and distancing narratives in reconciliation endeavors; and (4) concrete suggestions for pursuing peace with personal narratives of genocide and war when the macro-social level is sabotaging peace efforts.
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- Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2025