Skip to product information
1 of 1

Echoes of a Death

Regular price $28.00
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $28.00
Sold out
An ethnographic look at how police violence becomes embedded in everyday life in a low-income neighborhood of Santiago, Chile.
  • 03 November 2026
View Product Details

In neighborhoods subject to concentrated policing, deaths at the hands of police have become so pervasive that they are a feature of everyday life. But the loss of a human being—a child, sibling, parent, lover, or neighbor—cannot be normalized. It is always lived in the singular. Echoes of a Death traces how a police killing unfolds in a low-income neighborhood in Santiago, Chile that has been under a police occupation for decades as part of the country’s war on drugs and on crime.

Attending to women’s voices and actions, Han points towards a new way to study policing that departs from a saturation in state categories that continually settle the gaze on male figures and bounded institutional spaces. Instead, Echoes of a Death shows how scenes of domestic and neighborhood life are crisscrossed by policing practices, courts, municipal social services, clinics, the prison, and the media. Neither are the boundaries of the public and private defined in advance, nor is policing under democracy neatly bound off from policing under dictatorship.

Following how this death reverberates in a life, Echoes of a Death asks what it is to live in a house that has become not one’s own, in wounded kinship, and in a neighborhood marked again and again by state violence. In doing so, Han shows a method by which anthropology can render the diffused character of violence that is the signature of policing and how we can give importance to the continual work to reinhabit a life marked by it.

files/i.png Icon
Price: $28.00
Pages: 240
Publisher: Fordham University Press
Imprint: Fordham University Press
Series: Thinking from Elsewhere
Publication Date: 03 November 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781531515041
Format: Paperback
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Anthropology / Cultural & Social, HISTORY / Latin America / South America
REVIEWS Icon
“Clara Han renders with rare precision what it is to live with a death—to endure wounded kinship, to find and lose voice within conditions of concentrated policing, and to discover, in the company of friends and neighbors, the fragile, unbidden gestures through which life is made anew.”---Angela Garcia, Stanford University

Echoes of a Death is a poignant investigation into the experience of police violence perpetrated in the name of the war on crime and drugs, which is ultimately a war on the poor. A Chilean story, it is a remarkable account of life under state abuse across the world.”---Didier Fassin author of Enforcing Order: An Ethnography of Urban Policing
Clara Han is Professor of Anthropology at the Johns Hopkins University. She is the author of Seeing Like a Child: Inheriting the Korean War (Fordham, 2021, Winner, 2022 Senior Book Prize, Association for Feminist Anthropology; finalist, 2022 Victor Turner Prize) and Life in Debt: Times of Care and Violence in Neoliberal Chile (California, 2012) and coeditor, with Veena Das, of Living and Dying in the Contemporary World: A Compendium (California, 2015).