
@article{ref1,
title="Genocide yet again: Scenes of Rwanda and Ethical Witness in the Human Rights Memoir",
journal="Australian journal of politics and history",
year="2007",
author="Gigliotti, Simone",
volume="53",
number="1",
pages="84-95",
abstract="This article investigates three recent human rights memoirs that chronicle the Rwandan genocide of 1994: Emergency Sex (and other desperate measures): True Stories from a War Zone, Shake Hands with the Devil: the failure of humanity in Rwanda, and The Zanzibar Chest: a memoir of love and war. I use these memoirs to explore the complexities of bearing witness to ethnic violence and war as an autobiographical subject shaped by the memory of historical atrocity — as a besieged self in traumatic occupations of the UN protector (Roméo Dallaire), lawyer (Kenneth Cain), and war correspondent (Aidan Hartley). Finally, I suggest that the authors of these memoirs are secondary witnesses, claimants to ethical truths and writers of atrocity testimony that complicate the burgeoning life-telling compulsion of what is and who can claim to be a genocide victim.<p />",
language="",
issn="0004-9522",
doi="10.1111/j.1467-8497.2007.00444.x",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-8497.2007.00444.x"
}