The Continuity of Gandong Bond as Reflection of Maluku Identity Post Human Tragedy in Maluku 1999

Author(s):  
Fricean Tutuarima ◽  
Falantino Eryk Latupapua ◽  
Elfilina Kissya
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Stephen D. Bowd

Renaissance Mass Murder explores the devastating impact of war on the men and women of the Renaissance. In contrast to the picture of balance and harmony usually associated with the Renaissance, it uncovers in forensic detail a world in which sacks of Italian cities and massacres of civilians at the hands of French, German, Spanish, Swiss, and Italian troops were regular occurrences. The arguments presented are based on a wealth of evidence—histories and chronicles, poetry and paintings, sculpture and other objects—which together provide a new and startling history of sixteenth-century Italy and a social history of the Italian Wars. It outlines how massacres happened, how princes, soldiers, lawyers, and writers, justified and explained such events, and how they were represented in contemporary culture. On this basis the book reconstructs the terrifying individual experiences of civilians in the face of war and in doing so offers a story of human tragedy which redresses the balance of the history of the Italian Wars, and of Renaissance warfare, in favour of the civilian and away from the din of the battlefield. This book also places mass murder in a broader historical context and challenges claims that such violence was unusual or in decline in early modern Europe. Finally, it shows that women often suffered disproportionately from this violence and that immunity for them, as for their children, was often partially developed or poorly respected.


2018 ◽  
Vol 24 (1) ◽  
pp. 205-214
Author(s):  
James Hollings

Many countries have their Watergate moment, a scandal that envelopes not only mystery, intrigue, and human tragedy, but also something bigger, some kind of challenge to a country’s deepest beliefs about itself. What the US journalism scholar Michael Schudson called a country’s central moral values. For New Zealand, a good case could be made that our Watergate moment was the Thomas case. Like Watergate, it revealed ugly truths about corruption within some of our most respected institutions, and investigative journalism played a central role. Like Watergate, it was also a collective loss of innocence, and opened a very deep wound.


1987 ◽  
Vol 65 (47) ◽  
pp. 12-13 ◽  
Author(s):  
MICHAEL HEYLIN
Keyword(s):  

BMJ ◽  
1997 ◽  
Vol 314 (7091) ◽  
pp. 1423-1423 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Swafford
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
Joseph H. Hertz

This chapter presents a sermon based on ‘intercession service’. This service was established to replace the traditional ‘day of fast and humiliation’ during World War I. This intercession sermon, delivered by Joseph H. Hertz, honestly confesses the devastating effect on morale of the events he describes as ‘a human tragedy unapproached in civilized history’, the difficulty many have in reconciling the nightmare of their time with belief in the providence of a loving God. He incorporates quotations from literature — Kipling and Milton — and refers to Aristotle's theory of the cathartic effect of tragedy. And he applies a stunning rabbinic legend of Adam's despair at the darkness of the first night and God's reassurance that this darkness was not the final reality, together with the verse from the week's Torah lesson evoking both the discouragement of Moses and the promise of a new manifestation of the divine, as a source of hope.


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