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3 Law, Culture & Human. 1 (2007)

handle is hein.journals/lculh3 and id is 1 raw text is: 
                               Law, Culture and the Humanities 2007; 3: 1- 2

EDITORIAL

Sometimes  the world  summons   us to bring all our intellectual resources
to explain what  seems inexplicable. Sadly, this time, our time, provides
too many  such calls. While LCH  is not a journal of current affairs, from
time-to-time we will devote attention to a current and pressing problem.
Thus, this issue's Commentary Section takes on the complex and disturbing
issue of torture.
   It would be naive to assume that torture is new to our era. It has been,
and  remains, a sorry testimony to mankind's cruelty or our desperation.
No  one, not  even the world's supposedly  most civilized, law-abiding
societies is untouched by this history. America's post 9/11 actions and
policies place this country firmly within that history.
   But how  should students of law, culture, and the humanities respond to
the pressing call to speak out about, and against, torture? What can our
voices add to the pained  conversations that today try to come to terms
with it? We can focus on language and its misuses, language that unartfully
but insistently, proclaims - 'America does not torture -  all the while
finessing existing understandings to engage in activities that are cruel,
inhuman,  and degrading.
   We  can be clear about what  international law condones and  what  it
condemns,  and be vigilant and watchful when legal meanings are inverted.
We  can describe the many  ways in which violence is disdainful of reason,
pushes it aside, or takes over completely. Reason and violence have no way
to share control of human agency. When the two meet in battle only one can
win. We can insist that practices of torture are at war with the conception of
human   agency that is basic to legality.
   Torture reminds us of the complex relations of state, law, and violence
and  the fact that, in the end, state power  is a power  that makes  its
appearance  on the body. Our work should serve as a reminder that violence
of all kinds is done  everyday  with the explicit authorization of legal
institutions and officials or with their tacit acquiescence. Some of this
violence is done directly by legal officials, some by citizens acting under a
dispensation granted  by law  and  some  by persons  whose  violent acts
subsequently will be deemed  acceptable. Moreover  the pain which these
violent acts produce  is everywhere, in hidden  recesses of the torture
chamber  and the drama  of law's sporadic vengeance. Because the violence
of law and the state is done, authorized or condoned with all the normal
abnormality  of bureaucratic abstraction it is often hard to name  and
categorize. This is one of the lessons of our era's effort to come to terms with
torture.
   Our work then should do the deed of imagining, encouraging or perhaps
more  precisely foreshadowing a jurisprudence  of violence or at least a
jurisprudence that would put the question of law's lethal character at the
center of its concerns. Our work should help to end the conspiracy of silence


C 2007 Association for the Study ofLaw, Culture and the Humanities


10. 1177/1743 87210 70 73233

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