The turn to the nonhuman in the humanities and social sciences has
arguably been mobilized through a washing away of political violence,
its histories, and its traces. Reverberations aims to redress this
problem by methodologically and conceptually placing political violence
and nonhuman entities side by side. The volume generates a new framework
for the study of political violence and its protracted aftermath by
attending, through innovative ethnographic and historical studies, to
its distribution, extension, and endurance across time, space,
materialities, and otherworldly dimensions, as well as its embodiment in
subjectivities, discourses, and imaginations. Collectively, in the study
of political violence, the contributions focus on human agencies and
experiences in engagement with nonhuman entities such as objects, land,
fields, houses, buildings, treasures, trees, spirits, saints, and
prophets. In a variety of contexts, the scholars herein ask the crucial
question: What can be learned about political violence by analyzing it
in the terrain of relationality between human beings and nonhuman
entities? How are things such as objects, spaces, natural phenomena, or
spiritual beings entwined in histories of political violence? And vice
versa--how are histories of political violence implicated in nonhuman
things?