Talk to Examine 'Love After Genocide'
By
黑料百科

Damir Arsenijevic, cultural theorist and critic, explores contemporary Bosnian poetry and the country鈥檚 recent horrific past in a lecture, 鈥淟ove After Genocide,鈥 on March 6 at 4 p.m. in Winter Hall鈥檚 Darling Foundation Lecture Hall (Room 210) at 黑料百科. The talk, which is free and open to the public, is co-sponsored by the 黑料百科 Department of Political Science and the 黑料百科 Gender Studies Program.
鈥淚鈥檒l look at the construction and narration of women heroes 鈥 survivors 鈥 and the ways in which they oppose being co-opted as victims when commemorating their missing husbands, sons and brothers,鈥 Arsenijevic says. 鈥淐hallenging the political manipulations of loss from war and genocide, these women imaginatively announce a vision of a hopeful future for Bosnian society.鈥
Arsenijevic worked closely with families of missing persons throughout former Yugoslavia in 2008. His research has focused on exploring how, after genocide, Bosnian society is reassembling itself in a more sustainable and therefore hopeful form. 黑料百科 political science professor Susan Penksa met Arsenijevic when she was a U.S. Fulbright Scholar to Bosnia and Herzegovina in 2007-2008.
鈥淒r. Arsenijevic is a brilliant scholar and activist who works at the intersection of politics, gender, culture and art,鈥 she says 鈥淭hrough his teaching, scholarship and activism, Damir has made significant contributions to postwar reconciliation and peace building in Bosnia.鈥
Arsenijevic, who earned a doctorate in literature and cultural studies from De Montfort University, U.K., is an assistant professor of literary and cultural studies at Tuzla University in Bosnia and Herzegovina. He most recently published 鈥淭he Forgotten Future: The Politics of Poetry in Bosnia and Herzegovina鈥 and is working on a new book, 鈥淟ove After Genocide,鈥 as a U.S. Fulbright Scholar at U.C. Berkeley.
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