This book helps the reader understand what lies behind the use of monster images in relation to terrorism, exploring why media and government officials present or frame terrorists as monsters, but also why terrorists themselves sometimes try to act as such. Marco Pinfari argues that portraying terrorists as unmanageable monsters typically serves specific political agendas that, in turn, are designed to legitimize specific counter-terrorist policies. For terrorists, acting in ways that can be perceived as uncontrollable and inhumane is a rational tactic that has many precedents in the history of terrorism. By exploring the rational processes that lie behind the portrayal (or self-representation) of terrorists as inhumane, brutish and monstrous beings, this book challenges several common perceptions of the nature of contemporary terrorism.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
- Acknowledgments
- List of illustrations
- 1. Introduction: Terrorism, monsters and archetypal metaphors
- Part 1: Terrorists seen as monsters
- 2. The Abominables: To the roots of "terrorist" monsters
- 3. Contemporary logomachies
- Part 2: Terrorists acting as monsters
- 4. Revolutionary monstrosity
- 5. Monsters in the "jihadi revolutionary atmosphere"
- Part 3: Monstrous reflections
- 6. The monstrous enemy in the "terrorist" mind
- 7. The abyss of counter-terrorism
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Index