A well-written and engaging study of why we must grapple with the bureaucratic culture of violence. I appreciate how Tyner moves between past and present—constantly reminding the reader of why the Cambodian genocide has important resonance beyond its own horrors."" - Ian Shaw, author of <i>Predator Empire: Drone Warfare and Full Spectrum Dominance</i><br /><br />""Tyner has written an important book on the biopolitics of bureaucracy, archives, and lists. His novel concept of necrobureaucracy as a descriptor of the Khmer Rouge regime offers a new way of understanding the relationship between violence and state administration. An original and far-reaching piece of scholarship."" - Oliver Belcher, Durham University
The Politics of Lists analyzes thousands of newly available Cambodian documents both as sources of information and as objects worthy of study in and of themselves. How, Tyner asks, is recordkeeping implicated in the creation of political authority? What is the relationship between violence and bureaucracy? How can documents, as an anonymous technology capable of conveying great force, be understood in relation to newer technologies like drones? What does data create and what does it destroy? Through a theoretically informed, empirically grounded study of the Khmer Rouge security apparatus, Tyner shows that lists and telegrams have often proved as deadly as bullet and bombs.
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- 1. Emerging from the Shadows
- 2. A Tale of Two Lists
- 3. Into the Darkness
- 4. Mortal Accountings
- 5. Conclusions
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index