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Alexa  Hagerty

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Alexa Hagerty

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January 2023


Alexa Hagerty is an anthropologist researching science, technology, and human rights. She holds a PhD from Stanford University and is an associate fellow at the University of Cambridge. Her research has received honors and funding from the National Science Foundation, the Mellon Foundation, and the American Ethnological Society, among others. She has written for the Los Angeles Review of Books, Wired, Social Anthropology, and Palais de Tokyo.

Author photo: Hélène Ressayres

Average rating: 4.44 · 3,148 ratings · 622 reviews · 1 distinct workSimilar authors
Still Life with Bones: Geno...

4.44 avg rating — 3,148 ratings — published 2023 — 8 editions
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Quotes by Alexa Hagerty  (?)
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“It is one story among many. Every bone tells a life. Every person lost was a world.”
Alexa Hagerty, Still Life with Bones: Genocide, Forensics, and What Remains

“As Arendt observes, “The ideal subject of totalitarian rule is not the convinced Nazi or the convinced Communist, but people for whom the distinction between fact and fiction (i.e., the reality of experience) and the distinction between the true and the false (i.e., the standards of thought) no longer exist.”
Alexa Hagerty, Still Life with Bones: Genocide, Forensics, and What Remains

“Recent psychological research on grief favors meaning making over closure; accepts zigzagging paths, not just linear stages; recognizes ambiguity without pathology; and acknowledges continuing bonds between the living and the dead rather than commanding decathexis. But old ideas about grief as a linear march to closure still hold powerful sway. Many psychologists and grief counseling programs continue to consider “closure” a therapeutic goal. Sympathy cards, internet searches, and friendly advice often uphold a rigid division between healthy grief that the mourner “gets over” and unhealthy grief that persists. Forensic exhumation, too, continues to be informed by these deeply rooted ideas. The experiences of grief and exhumation related by families of the missing indicate something more complex and mysterious than “closure.” Exhumation heals and wounds, sometimes both at once, in the same gesture, in the same breath, as Dulce described feeling consoled and destroyed by the fragment of her brother’s bones. Exhumation can divide brothers and restore fathers, open old wounds and open the possibility of regeneration—of building something new with the “pile of broken mirrors” that is memory, loss, and mourning.”
Alexa Hagerty, Still Life with Bones: Genocide, Forensics, and What Remains

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