Violent Exceptions
Children’s Human Rights and Humanitarian Rhetorics
Author(s)
Hesford, Wendy S.
Collection
Knowledge Unlatched (KU); Toward an Open Monograph Ecosystem (TOME)Language
EnglishAbstract
Violent Exceptions turns to the humanitarian figure of the child-in-peril in twenty-first-century political discourse to better understand how this figure is appropriated by political constituencies for purposes rarely to do with the needs of children at risk. Wendy S. Hesford shows how the figure of the child-in-peril is predicated on racial division, which, she argues, is central to both conservative and liberal logics, especially at times of crisis when politicians leverage humanitarian storytelling as a political weapon. Through iconic images and stories of child migrants, child refugees, undocumented children, child soldiers, and children who are victims of war, terrorism, and state violence, Violent Exceptions illustrates how humanitarian rhetoric turns public attention away from systemic violations against children’s human rights and reframes this violence as exceptional—erasing more gradual forms of violence and minimizing human rights potential to counteract these violations and the precarious conditions from which they arise.
Keywords
Political Science; Human Rights; Language Arts & Disciplines; Rhetoric; Social Science; Children's StudiesDOI
https://doi.org/10.26818/9780814214688ISBN
9780814281178Publisher
The Ohio State University PressPublisher website
https://ohiostatepress.org/Publication date and place
2021Imprint
The Ohio State University PressClassification
Human rights
Semantics, discourse analysis, etc
Age groups: children
Human rights, civil rights
Semantics, discourse analysis, stylistics
Age groups: children