BIBLIOGRAPHY / REFERENCES & RESOURCES

Al Jazeera. (2023, July 27). What are Black July massacres that triggered Sri Lanka’s 26-year Civil War?

Alagusenthil. (n.d.). The father of library science in India. Google Sites. https://sites.google.com/site/alagusenthil/the-father-of-library-science-in-india

Anandakugan, N. (2020, August 31). The Sri Lankan civil war and its history, revisited in 2020. Harvard International Review. https://hir.harvard.edu/sri-lankan-civil-war/

Ananthavinayagan, T. V. (2020, May 29). The burning of Jaffna Public Library: Sri Lanka’s first step toward civil war. The Diplomat. https://thediplomat.com/2020/05/the-burning-of-jaffna-public-library-sri-lankas-first-step-toward-civil-war/

Bajoria, J. (2009, May 18). The Sri Lankan conflict. Council on Foreign Relations. https://www.cfr.org/backgrounder/sri-lankan-conflict

Collective for Historical Dialogue & Memory. (n.d.). CHDM. https://chdmlka.org/

de Alwis, M. (2008). Motherhood as a space of protest: women’s political participation in contemporary sri lanka. In P. Banerjee (Ed.), South Asian Peace Studies: Women in peace politics (Vol. 3, pp. 152-174). New Delhi: SAGE Publications India Pvt Ltd doi: 10.4135/9788178299686.n10

Ganeshananthan, V. V. (2023, March 1). “When Americans read other countries, those countries are flattened down to one point”. Literary Hub. https://lithub.com/v-v-ganeshananthan-when-americans-read-other-countries-those-countries-are-flattened-down-to-one-point/

The Broken Palmyra, a book written by University Teachers for Human Rights (Jaffna). https://www.saada.org/sites/all/themes/saada/bookreader.php?title=VGhlIEJyb2tlbiBQYWxteXJhOiBUaGUgVGFtaWwgQ3Jpc2lzIGluIFNyaSBMYW5rYSwgQW4gSW5zaWRlIEFjY291bnQ=&folder=a2FydGlrLWFtYXJuYXRo&object=aXRlbS1rYXJ0aWstYWhjLQ==&pages=NQ==#page/2/mode/1up

Human Rights Watch. (2024, May 14). 15 years since Sri Lanka’s conflict ended, no justice for war crimes. https://www.hrw.org/news/2024/05/14/15-years-sri-lankas-conflict-ended-no-justice-war-crimes

Khare, V. (2017, October 17). Return to Sri Lanka: Indian soldier revisits a brutal battlefield. BBC News. https://www.bbc.com/news/world-asia-india-41377725

Klodawsky, H. (Director). (2004). No More Tears Sister: Anatomy of Hope and Betrayal [Documentary film]. National Film Board of Canada.* https://www.nfb.ca/film/no-more-tears-sister-anatomy-of-hope-and-betrayal

*This film centers on the life of Rajani Thiranagama

McCarthy, J. (2015, August 19). Up from the ashes, a public library in Sri Lanka welcomes new readers. NPR. https://www.npr.org/sections/parallels/2015/08/19/432779251/up-from-the-ashes-a-public-library-in-sri-lanka-welcomes-new-readers

Noolaham Foundation. (n.d.). முதற் பக்கம் [Homepage]. Noolaham. Retrieved May 12, 2025, from https://www.noolaham.org/wiki/index.php/முதற்_பக்கம்

Perera, S. (2018, August 21). Reproductive justice for the mothers of the disappeared in Sri Lanka. RESURJ. https://resurj.org/reflection/reproductive-justice-for-the-mothers-of-the-disappeared-in-sri-lanka

Perlez, J. (1987, September 27). A Tamil separatist leader dies in protest fast. The New York Times. https://www.nytimes.com/1987/09/27/world/a-tamil-separatist-leader-dies-in-protest-fast.html

Princeton University Library. (n.d.). Dissidents and activists in Sri Lanka, 1960s to 1990s. Digital PUL. https://dpul.princeton.edu/sae_sri_lanka_dissidents

Tamil Guardian. (2025, March 26). Family performs final rites for loved ones 38 years after IPKF killing. Tamil Guardian. https://www.tamilguardian.com/content/family-performs-final-rites-loved-ones-killed-ipkf-1987

Tamil Guardian. (2025, April 21). 35 years on: When Indian ‘Peace Keepers’ became aggressors in Tamil Eelam. Tamil Guardian. https://www.tamilguardian.com/content/35-years-ipkf-withdrew-sri-lanka

TamilNation.org. (n.d.). Thiyagi Thileepan – Rasaiah Parthipan. Retrieved May 13, 2025, from https://tamilnation.org/tamileelam/maveerar/thileepan.htm

Thiranagama, S. (2011). In My Mother’s House: Civil War in Sri Lanka. University of Pennsylvania Press.

Thiranagama, S. (2018). The civility of strangers? Caste, ethnicity, and living together in postwar Jaffna, Sri Lanka. Anthropological Theory, 18(2-3), 357-381. https://doi.org/10.1177/1463499617744476

University of Edinburgh. (n.d.). Sri Lanka: Histories of conscience and dissent. A Comparative Anthropology of Conscience, Ethics & Human Rights. https://anthropology-of-conscience.sps.ed.ac.uk/sri-lanka/University Teachers for Human Rights (Jaffna). (n.d.). Dr. Rajani Thiranagama. Retrieved May 13, 2025, from https://www.uthr.org/Rajani.htm