"Jackson and Karen Lears have given us a compelling and relevant collection of writings revealing the human, geopolitical, and moral costs of America’s long engagement with perpetual global war. <i>Raritan on War</i> is a profoundly important intervention in its revelations of the human consequences-at home and abroad-of the bipartisan commitment to war making." - Katrina vanden Heuvel (editorial director and publisher, The Nation) "At a time when armed conflict is not just widespread, but rehabilitated and sanctified in the eyes of many, <i>Raritan on War</i> is an important reminder of its ruination, its viciousness, and maybe most important, of the artifice and forgetting that lead societies to justify its use." - Branko Marcetic (Jacobin) "<i>Raritan on War</i> gives us a collection of beautifully told, unforgettable portraits of war and its ills. Bringing to life the voices and imagery of victims who have suffered war’s devastating harms, as well as the insidious role played by defenders of war, this volume represents the legacy of <i>Raritan</i> at its literary and timeless best." - Karen Greenberg (author of Subtle Tools: The Dismantling of American Democracy from the War on Terror to Donald Trump) "While spanning a wide range of wars and eras, this anthology also offers a sharp focus on the U.S. warfare state in the present day. <i>Raritan on War</i> powerfully challenges us to look anew at the unhinged militarism that permeates American society." - Norman Solomon (author of War Made Invisible: How America Hides the Human Toll of Its Military Machine)

We are, once again, a world at war. Geopolitical elites are deploying the implacable forces of ethnocentric hatred and religious nationalism; ordinary people are paying a fearful price. Not for the first time: this has been the characteristic pattern of war for more than a century. Every selection in this anthology (except for the timeless Aeneid) casts light on modern war, observed or directly experienced. Most are grounded in particular places-Stalingrad, Halberstadt, Budapest, Baghdad, Algiers, the Tamil ghost towns of Sri Lanka, the six-by-twelve-foot cell in Belmarsh maximum security prison where Julian Assange is held without bail for the act of revealing U.S. war crimes. Some recapture the actual look and feel of war-the sight of a seven-year-old girl clutching her mother's hand, dodging explosions in the Halberstadt public square; the sound of a Mozart concerto in D Minor, heard by a family hiding in a cave, played on their own piano by a Serbian sniper. Others take aim at the vast and vapid abstractions used to justify armed conflict, down to and including the use of nuclear weapons.

Raritan on War collects some of the finest writing on that troubling subject published in Raritan Quarterly between 2003 and 2022. The editors, Jackson Lears and Karen Parker Lears, have selected work that typifies Raritan's wide-ranging sensibility, focusing on a topic that is aesthetically rich, intellectually challenging, and morally disturbing. Ultimately, Raritan on War reveals the power of art and reflection to sustain humane ways of being in the world, even amid constant global violence.

Contributors: C. Felix Amerasinghe; Andrew J. Bacevich; Victoria De Grazia; Tamas Dobozy; David Ferry; M. Fortuna; Cai Guo-Qiang; Emma Dodge Hanson; Jochen Hellbeck; Karl Kirchwey; Ray Klimek; Peter LaBier; Patrick Lawrence; d. mark levitt; Michael Miller; Lyle Jeremy Rubin; Elizabeth D. Samet; Sherod Santos; Robert Westbrook
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Introduction

Victoria De Grazia
You Are Not Alone, Stalingrad: Reflections on the 75th Anniversary

Patrick Lawrence
Assange behind Glass

M. Fortuna
Percussion of Cut and Salve (painting-assemblage)

Michael Miller
Six Years from Afghanistan (poetry)

C. Felix Amerasinghe
The Road to Revolution (fiction)

Andrew J. Bacevich
War and the Failures of the Fourth Estate

David Ferry
Labores: A Translation from the Aeneid (poetry)

Jochen Hellbeck and Emma Dodge Hanson
Remembering Stalingrad (photo-essay)

Peter LaBier
White Fright (painting)

Elizabeth D. Samet
Make Movies, Not War

Karl Kirchwey
Mutabor: Halberstadt (poetry)

Ray Klimek
Carbon Burn (digital chromogenic print)

Robert Westbrook
Bourne over Baghdad

Lyle Jeremy Rubin
The Man Who Knew Too Much

d. mark levitt,
god is water (painting)

Tamas Dobozy
The Animals of the Budapest Zoo, 1944-1945 (fiction)

Sherod Santos
The Art of the Landscape (poetry)

Cai Guo-Qiang
Drawing for Transient Rainbow (drawing)

Contributors
About the Editors
Image Credits
Permissions
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781978841611
Publisert
2025-03-31
Utgiver
Rutgers University Press
Vekt
367 gr
Høyde
203 mm
Bredde
132 mm
Dybde
22 mm
Aldersnivå
01, G, U, P, 01, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
228

Biografisk notat

JACKSON LEARS is Board of Governors Distinguished Professor of History at Rutgers University and editor in chief of Raritan Quarterly. He has written five books in American cultural history, the most recent of which is Animal Spirits: The American Pursuit of Vitality from Camp Meeting to Wall Street. His essays and reviews have appeared in The London Review of Books, The New York Review of Books, The Nation, and The New Republic; they will be collected in Conjurers, Cranks, Provincials, and Antediluvians: The Off-Modern in American History.

KAREN PARKER LEARS is associate editor of Raritan Quarterly. From her art studio, Swansquarter, she works under the name M. Fortuna. She has had solo shows at Princeton University, the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture at the University of Virginia, and at the Johnson & Johnson World Headquarters Gallery in New Brunswick, New Jersey.  She created illuminations for Women Writers of Latin America: Intimate Histories. Her work can be viewed on the website swansquarter.com.