The Cultural Lives of Capital Punishment, a new book edit­ed by pro­fes­sor Austin Sarat of Amherst College and lec­tur­er Christian Boulanger of the Free University in Berlin, exam­ines the com­pli­cat­ed dynam­ics of the death penal­ty in eleven nations to deter­mine what role cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment plays in defin­ing a coun­try’s polit­i­cal and cul­tur­al iden­ti­ty. The edi­tors note that a nation’s val­ues and cul­tur­al his­to­ry influ­ence its rela­tion­ship with cap­i­tal pun­ish­ment. The book includes exam­i­na­tions of the death penal­ty in Mexico, the United States, Poland, Kyrgyzstan, India, Israel, Palestine, Japan, China, Singapore, and South Korea. The edi­tors con­clude: What is clear is that the death penal­ty lives many dif­fer­ent lives and dies many dif­fer­ent deaths. Like glob­al­iza­tion in gen­er­al, the glob­al­iza­tion of the dis­cours­es on state killing should not blind us to the very local nature of pun­ish­ment. There might be uni­ver­sal rea­sons against cap­i­tal punishment…but the strug­gle against the penal­ty of death must be fought again and again in each dif­fer­ent cul­ture in ways that acknowl­edge and respect cap­i­tal pun­ish­men­t’s dis­tinc­tive cul­tur­al lives.” (Stanford University Press, 2005) See International Death Penalty and Books.

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