The Abolition of War explores the ideas that inform Krzysztof
Wodiczko's project The World Institute for the Abolition of War and is
a manifesto for the dismantling of what Wodiczko sees as the ubiquitous,
unconscious, and ultimately perilous "Culture of War", which is embedded
within and constantly reaffirmed by our monuments and our historical
narratives. In this volume Wodiczko, winner of the Hiroshima Art Prize
in 1998, offers a detailed examination of his proposal for The World
Institute for the Abolition of War, a projected "Un-War Memorial"
constructed as a structure encapsulating the existing Arc de Triomphe in
Paris.
Wodiczko is joined by anthropologist Douglas Fry to shed light on the
silent but deeply rooted ideologies of war, which permeate our
contemporary societies, fuelling current acts of aggression and
threatening to erupt into further warfare. Fry's essay "Abolition of
War: An Agenda for Survival" contradicts the generally held assumption
that war is an inevitable aspect of human life, and posits new models of
global interdependency as the necessary step towards viable peace.