Synopses & Reviews
Terrorism has a variety of contexts, histories and forms which have all been the focus of intense scrutiny in recent years, whilst cultural representations of the terrorist have received much less attention, which is odd when we consider that terrorism by its very nature is spectacle. This book explores how the terrorist is represented and the processes through which they have subsumed so many popular cultural myths. It discusses how a terrorist's capacity for destruction can be linked to their appropriation or rejection of gender stereotypes and includes essays on masculinities in post-conflict Northern Ireland, gendered insurgency, the colonial state of exception, Oedipal rivalries, the German Red Army Faction, masculinity in Fox television saga 24 and Anders Behring Breivik's sartorial code. In addition to essays that debate the broad imagery that surrounds terrorism's visual cultures it includes pages by artists who question the role of censorship and the physiognomy of evil.
About the Author
Sue Malvern is Senior Lecturer in History of Art, University of Reading, UK.
Gabriel Koureas is Lecturer in Visual and Material culture at Birkbeck, University of London, UK.
Table of Contents
Contributors' Biographies
List of Illustrations
Sue Malvern and Gabriel Koureas: Introduction
1. Charlotte Klonk: Image Terror
2. Sue Malvern: Femininity, Feminism and the Terrorist
3. Sylvia Schraut: Gender and the Terrorist in Historiography
4. Dominique Grisard: Upheaval of Daughters and Sons. Oedipal Rivalries and the Red Army Faction Historiography
Xenofon Kavvadias Artist's Pages
Carolina Caycedo Artist's Pages
5. Stephen Morton: The Gendered Insurgent and the Colonial State of Exception
6. Gabriel Koureas: Competing Masculinities in the Museum Space: Terrorists, Machines and Mangled Metal
7. Andreas Behnke: Dressed to Kill: The Sartorial Code of Anders Behring Breivik
8. Graham Dawson: Masculinities and 'the terrorist' in Conflict Transformation: Representation, Identity and Reconciliation in Post-conflict Northern Ireland
9. Alex Adams: Terrorism as Sexual Envy: Adversarial Masculinities in Two Fictions
of Ticking Bomb Torture
10. Aaron Edwards: Gangsters, Thugs, Savages, Terrorists? Representations of 'The Enemy' in Britain's Small Wars
Index