The Origins of Violence: Religion, History and Genocide

Author:   John Docker
Publisher:   Pluto Press
ISBN:  

9780745325446


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   20 August 2008
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained


Our Price $264.00 Quantity:  
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The Origins of Violence: Religion, History and Genocide


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Author:   John Docker
Publisher:   Pluto Press
Imprint:   Pluto Press
Dimensions:   Width: 13.50cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 21.50cm
Weight:   0.437kg
ISBN:  

9780745325446


ISBN 10:   0745325440
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   20 August 2008
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Stock Indefinitely
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained

Table of Contents

Dedication: this book is dedicated to Ned Curthoys Preface, Acknowledgements, and Contents Page Introduction 1. Genocide as Ancient Practice: Chimpanzees, Humans, Agricultural Society 2. Genocide, and Questioning of Genocide, in Classical Greece: Herodotus and Thucydides 3. Genocide, Trauma, and World Upside Down in Ancient Greek Tragedy: Aeschylus and Euripides 4. Utopia and Dystopia: Plato and Cicero's Republics 5. Victimology and Genocide: The Bible's Exodus, Virgil's Aeneid 6. Roman Settler Imperialism in Britain: Narrative and Counter Narrative in Tacitus' Agricola and Germania 7. The Honourable Coloniser 8. Was the Enlightenment the origin of the Holocaust? Conclusion: Can there be an end to violence? References Index

Reviews

From primatology to ancient Greece and Rome to the Bible, early-modern Europe and the Enlightenment, Docker's profound and original analyses provide a deeply unsettling narrative of the longevity of human practices of group violence. At the same time as The Origins of Violence dethrones regnant frameworks of genocide studies that stress the role of modernity or the state, and invites us to historicise genocide into the very longue duree, it challenges us to recognise the uncomfortable truth that genocidal tendencies remain tolerated, even celebrated, today - and not only in 'developing countries' - whenever they cohere with states' self-images. A Gandhian plea for non-violence that shockingly demonstrates the almost Sisyphean nature of the task. Dan Stone, Professor of Modern History, Royal Holloway University of London This is a most interesting and disturbing book. To begin with, it displays a high level of scholarship in its examination of the ways in which classical historical and literary texts contain both a description and a moral critique of the ancient's world inter-group violence. At the same time, it combines this analysis with a firm commitment to the modern, humanist values of non-violence and internationalism. Sabby Sagall, former senior lecturer in Sociology at the University of East London


"""From primatology to ancient Greece and Rome to the Bible, early-modern Europe and the Enlightenment, Docker's profound and original analyses provide a deeply unsettling narrative of the longevity of human practices of group violence. At the same time as The Origins of Violence dethrones regnant frameworks of genocide studies that stress the role of modernity or the state, and invites us to historicise genocide into the very longue duree, it challenges us to recognise the uncomfortable truth that genocidal tendencies remain tolerated, even celebrated, today - and not only in 'developing countries' - whenever they cohere with states' self-images. A Gandhian plea for non-violence that shockingly demonstrates the almost Sisyphean nature of the task."" Dan Stone, Professor of Modern History, Royal Holloway University of London""This is a most interesting and disturbing book. To begin with, it displays a high level of scholarship in its examination of the ways in which classical historical and literary texts contain both a description and a moral critique of the ancient's world inter-group violence. At the same time, it combines this analysis with a firm commitment to the modern, humanist values of non-violence and internationalism."" Sabby Sagall, former senior lecturer in Sociology at the University of East London"


Author Information

John Docker is Adjunct Senior Research Fellow, Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University. He is the author of 1492: The Poetics of Diaspora (2001), Postmodernism and Popular Culture (1994) and and (with Ann Curthoys) Is History Fiction? (2005).

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