van Liere, Lucien2023-05-162023-05-162018https://www.jrfm.eu/index.php/ojs_jrfm/article/view/94https://mediarep.org/handle/doc/20656In The Act of Killing, (Joshua Oppenheimer, ID, DK 2012), Joshua Oppenheimer searches for humanness by assessing the rituals, routines and grammar of former perpetrators who played a role during the 1965/6 genocide in Medan, Indonesia. This article puts The Act of Killing in the context of Oppenheimer’s writings on film and violence and explores how this film negotiates humanness by working with a missionary paradigm of expressive guilt that not only serves the director, but also a critical audience with a happy ending.engCreative Commons Attribution Non Commercial 4.0 GenericGhostsHumanity791The Banality of Ghosts: Searching for Humanity with Joshua Oppenheimer in The Act of KillingJoshua Oppenheimer10.25364/05.4:2018.1.210.25969/mediarep/19467THE ACT OF KILLING2617-3697