Bültmann & Gerriets
Terror and Modernity
von Donatella Di Cesare
Übersetzung: Murtha Baca
Verlag: John Wiley and Sons Ltd
Hardcover
ISBN: 978-1-5095-3149-3
Erschienen am 10.05.2019
Sprache: Englisch
Format: 216 mm [H] x 139 mm [B] x 17 mm [T]
Gewicht: 235 Gramm
Umfang: 208 Seiten

Preis: 22,50 €
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Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis

We are inclined to see terrorist attacks as an aberration, a violent incursion into our lives that bears no intrinsic relation to the fundamental features of modern societies. But does this view misconstrue the relationship between terror and modernity?
In this book, philosopher Donatella Di Cesare takes a historical approach and argues that terror is not a new phenomenon, but rather one that has always been a key part of modernity. At its most basic level, terrorism is about the struggle for power and sovereignty. The growing concentration of power in the hands of the state, which is a constitutive feature of modern societies, sows the seeds of terrorism, which is deployed as a weapon by those who are exposed to the violence of the state and feel that they have no other recourse.
As Di Cesare illustrates her argument with examples ranging from the Red Brigades and 9/11 to jihadism and ISIS, her sophisticated analysis will appeal to anyone who wishes to understand contemporary terrorism more deeply, as well as to students and scholars of philosophy and political theory.



Donatella Di Cesare is Professor of Theoretical Philosophy at the Sapienza University of Rome.



  • Chapter One. Planetary Terror
  • 1. Bataclan
  • 2. War on Terror
  • 3. Global Civil War
  • 4. The Bomb of Modernity
  • 5. The Ghost of Bin Laden
  • 6. Philosophies of Terrorism
  • 7. Red Brigades, RAF, and the Impossible Exchange
  • 8. The Absolute Weapon of One's Own Death
  • 9. Atmoterrorism: Auschwitz, Dresden, Hiroshima, etc.
  • 10. Heidegger and the Ban of Existence from the Biosphere
  • 11. The Monopoly of Negation
  • 12. The Metaphysics of the Terrorist Attack
  • Chapter Two. Terror, Revolution, Sovereignty
  • 1. A Brand Name
  • 2. Defusing Terrorism
  • 3. Notes on Fear, Anxiety, and Terror
  • 4. Revolutionary Terror is Not Terrorism
  • 5. Are Terrorists Nihilists?
  • 6. Why defend anarchists
  • 7. Dostoyevski and the Terrorist within Me
  • 8. Terror and Sovereignty: On Lenin
  • 9. "Once Upon a Time There Was a Revolution"
  • 10. The Partisan, the Guerrilla, the Terrorist
  • Chapter Three. Jihadism and Modernity
  • 1. Radicalization
  • 2. The Political Theology of the Planetary Neo-caliphate
  • 3. The Postmodern Horsemen of the Apocalypse
  • 4. The Path to Terror
  • 5. Cyberterrorism
  • 6. Jihadist Thanathopolitics
  • 7. Media, New Media, and Terror
  • 8. The Car Bomb
  • 9. Explosions, Massacres, Decapitations
  • 10. Vulnerability, or Innocence Lost
  • 11. The Negated Ethics of the Hostage
  • 12. The Future in the Time of Terror
  • Chapter Four. The New Phobocracy
  • 1. Clash of Civilizations, Class Struggle, or "Holy" War?
  • 2. The Offensive of Radicalized Secularism
  • 3. Hermeneutics Counters Violence
  • 4. Sedative or Stimulant? Religion According to Marx
  • 5. The Left and Jihad
  • 6. Spanish BrigadesÐSyrian Brigades
  • 7. The Terrorism of Global Capitalism
  • 8. Democracy Put to the Test by Anti-terrorism
  • 9. Snowden: On Planetary Surveillance
  • 10. The New Phobocracy
  • Notes
  • Selected Bibliography


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