264 Pages
by Routledge

264 Pages
by Routledge

264 Pages
by Routledge

Ending Terrorism in Italy analyses processes of disengagement from terrorism, as well as the connected issues of reconciliation, truth and justice. It examines in a critical and original way how terrorism came to an end in Italy (Part I), and the legacy it has left behind (Part II). The book interrogates a wide array of published memoirs and a considerable number of new face-to-face interviews... Read more

Introduction  1. Political memoirs and the study of terrorism  2. Becoming terrorists  3. Disengagement and disassociation  4. Negotiating personal and collective healing and identity after terrorism  5. Italy in Comparative Perspective  6. Conclusion

Biography

Anna Cento Bull is Professor of Italian History and Politics, University of Bath, UK.

Philip Cooke is Professor of Italian History and Culture at the University of Strathclyde, UK.

 

'Anna Cento Bull and Philip Cooke address these questions and more in a perceptive and insightful book that offers a welcome addition to a literature that to date has mostly looked at the causes and origins of Italian terrorism, and much less at its cessation and legacy.'

- Ilaria Favretto, The Times Higher Education