Description
Speaking Silence is an edited volume presenting peer-reviewed papers and discussions from a prestigious UGC-sponsored national seminar that brought together academics, researchers, and scholars from diverse disciplines. The book explores the complex phenomenon of silence from multiple perspectives including historical analysis, political theory, and psychological investigation.
Contributors examine how silence operates in various contexts: as a tool of resistance and oppression, as a psychological defense mechanism, and as a significant element in historical narratives often overlooked in conventional accounts. The proceedings offer critical insights into the politics of voice and voicelessness, the psychology of silence in individual and collective memory, and the historical circumstances that have enforced or chosen silence.
This scholarly work serves as an important reference for students, researchers, and academics interested in understanding silence not merely as absence, but as an active, constructed, and meaningful phenomenon that shapes our understanding of history, politics, and human behavior.







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