1st Edition

Discourses and Practices of Terrorism Interrogating Terror

Edited By Bob Brecher, Mark Devenney, Aaron Winter Copyright 2010
208 Pages
by Routledge

208 Pages
by Routledge

208 Pages
by Routledge

This interdisciplinary book investigates the consequences of the language of terror for our lives in democratic societies. The approach of this book is in direct contrast with those that either view terrorism simplistically, as a clear reality threatening democratic society and thus requiring certain sorts of response, or argue, equally simplistically, that the invocation of terror is merely... Read more

1. Introduction: Philosophy, Politics, Terror Bob Brecher and Mark Devenney  2. Rediscovering the Individual in the "War on Terror": a Virtue and Liberal Approach  Heather Widdows  3. Is there a Justifiable Shoot-to-Kill Policy? Shahrar Ali  4. Torture and the Demise of the Justiciable Standard of Enlightened Government: A S Perspective Don Wallace and Akis Kalaitzidis  5. Asylum and the Discourse of Terror: the European "Security state" Fran Cetti  6. Feeling Persecuted? The Definitive Role of Paranoid Anxiety in the Constitution of "War on Terror" Television Hugh Ortega Breton  7. Fundamentalist Foundations of Terrorist Practice:the Political Logic of Life-Sacrifice  Jeff Noonan  8. Specificities, Complexities, Histories: Algerian Politics and George Bush’s USA-led "War on Terror" Martin Evans  9. Ignatieff, Ireland and the Lesser Evil: Some Problems with the Lessons Learnt Mark McGovern  10. American Terror: from Oklahoma City to 9/11 and After Aaron Winter. Bibliography 

Biography

Bob Brecher is Director of the Centre for Applied Philosophy, Politics and Ethics at Brighton University. He has published widely in moral, political and applied philosophy and the politics of higher education.

Mark Devenney is Academic Programme Leader in Humanities at the University of Brighton. He has published in the areas of critical theory, post-Marxism and post-colonial politics.

Aaron Winter is Lecturer in Sociology at the University of Abertay Dundee. His research focuses on terrorism and the concept of ‘extremism’, whiteness, masculinity and violence, and the extreme right, organised racism and the religious right in the United States.