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Without Past, No Future. Forgetting, Remembering and Reconciliation in Gilbert Gatore's Le Passe Devant Soi
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Without Past, No Future. Forgetting, Remembering and Reconciliation in Gilbert Gatore’s Le Passe Devant Soi

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Seminar paper from the year 2014 in the subject English - Literature, Works, grade: 1.3, University of Tubingen (English Department), course: Visions of the Future, Shadows of the Past: Contemporary Issues in African Literature, language: English, abstract: 20 years ago, in 1994, the otherwise largely ignored little Central African country of Rwanda made the international headlines by making the world witness its most recent genocide to date. The countries two major ethnic groups, Hutu and Tutsi, had a long history of violence with recurring mutual massacres. Following the downing of the plane carrying Rwanda’s president Habyarimana, Hutu militias took control and together with the ordinary population tried to wipe out the Tutsi in countrywide government-sponsored massacres that exceeded previous massacres in quantity and quality. Post-genocide Rwandan society, and therefore its government, faces a very precarious situation: how to rebuild a society in which there are more perpetrators than victims and in which the crimes where largely conducted by the ordinary population? Perhaps the biggest problem faced is that at their core the massacres were hate crimes as opposed to massacres for practical reasons, say, to get more land. One of the country’s most pressing issues is therefore reconciliation between these two groups over the past conflicts. The Tutsi-led government has decided to tackle this complex problem by simple means: officially abolishing ethnicities and encouraging Tutsi survivors to forgive Hutu perpetrators. However, as noble and well-meaning this approach seems at first glance, the negative implications might far outweigh the positive ones in the long run, which will be discussed in detail further below. Many non-fictional papers have dealt with the phenomenon of collective amnesia, yet a surprisingly small number of fictional works has done so, making the few existing ones the more valuable. This paper is going to use one of these fictional wor

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MORE INFO
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Grin Publishing
Country
United States
Date
7 March 2017
ISBN
9783668393578

Seminar paper from the year 2014 in the subject English - Literature, Works, grade: 1.3, University of Tubingen (English Department), course: Visions of the Future, Shadows of the Past: Contemporary Issues in African Literature, language: English, abstract: 20 years ago, in 1994, the otherwise largely ignored little Central African country of Rwanda made the international headlines by making the world witness its most recent genocide to date. The countries two major ethnic groups, Hutu and Tutsi, had a long history of violence with recurring mutual massacres. Following the downing of the plane carrying Rwanda’s president Habyarimana, Hutu militias took control and together with the ordinary population tried to wipe out the Tutsi in countrywide government-sponsored massacres that exceeded previous massacres in quantity and quality. Post-genocide Rwandan society, and therefore its government, faces a very precarious situation: how to rebuild a society in which there are more perpetrators than victims and in which the crimes where largely conducted by the ordinary population? Perhaps the biggest problem faced is that at their core the massacres were hate crimes as opposed to massacres for practical reasons, say, to get more land. One of the country’s most pressing issues is therefore reconciliation between these two groups over the past conflicts. The Tutsi-led government has decided to tackle this complex problem by simple means: officially abolishing ethnicities and encouraging Tutsi survivors to forgive Hutu perpetrators. However, as noble and well-meaning this approach seems at first glance, the negative implications might far outweigh the positive ones in the long run, which will be discussed in detail further below. Many non-fictional papers have dealt with the phenomenon of collective amnesia, yet a surprisingly small number of fictional works has done so, making the few existing ones the more valuable. This paper is going to use one of these fictional wor

Read More
Format
Paperback
Publisher
Grin Publishing
Country
United States
Date
7 March 2017
ISBN
9783668393578