Cover image for Horrorism : Naming Contemporary Violence.
Horrorism : Naming Contemporary Violence.
Title:
Horrorism : Naming Contemporary Violence.
Author:
Cavarero, Adriana.
ISBN:
9780231519175
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (154 pages)
Series:
New Directions in Critical Theory
Contents:
Cover -- Half title -- Series Page -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Translator's Note -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction: Scenes of a Massacre -- 1: Etymologies: "Terror" or, On Surviving -- 2: Etymologies: "Horror" or, On Dismembering -- 3: On War -- 4: The Howl of Medusa -- 5: The Vulnerability of the Helpless -- 6: The Crime of Medea -- 7: Horrorism -- or, On Violence Against the Helpless -- 8: Those Who Have Seen the Gorgon -- 9: Auschwitz -- or, On Extreme Horror -- 10: Erotic Carnages -- 11: So Mutilated that It Might Be the Body of a Pig -- 12: The Warrior's Pleasure -- 13: Worldwide Aggressiveness -- 14: For a History of Terror -- 15: Suicidal Horrorism -- 16: When the Bomb Is a Woman's Body -- 17: Female Torturers Grinning at the Camera -- Appendix: The Horror! The Horror! Rereading Conrad -- Notes -- Bibliography.
Abstract:
Words like "terrorism" and "war" no longer encompass the scope of contemporary violence. With this explosive book, Adriana Cavarero, one of the world's most provocative feminist theorists and political philosophers, effectively renders such terms obsolete. She introduces a new word& mdash;"horrorism"& mdash;to capture the experience of violence. Unlike terror, horrorism is a form of violation grounded in the offense of disfiguration and massacre. Numerous outbursts of violence fall within Cavarero's category of horrorism, especially when the phenomenology of violence is considered from the perspective of the victim rather than that of the warrior. Cavarero locates horrorism in the philosophical, political, literary, and artistic representations of defenseless and vulnerable victims. She considers both terror and horror on the battlefields of the Iliad, in the decapitation of Medusa, and in the murder of Medea's children. In the modern arena, she forges a link between horror, extermination, and massacre, especially the Nazi death camps, and revisits the work of Primo Levi, Hannah Arendt's thesis on totalitarianism, and Arendt's debate with Georges Bataille on the estheticization of violence and cruelty. In applying the horroristic paradigm to the current phenomena of suicide bombers, torturers, and hypertechnological warfare, Cavarero integrates Susan Sontag's views on photography and the eroticization of horror, as well as ideas on violence and the state advanced by Thomas Hobbes and Carl Schmitt. Through her searing analysis, Caverero proves that violence against the helpless claims a specific vocabulary, one that has been known for millennia, and not just to the Western tradition. Where common language fails to form a picture of atrocity, horrorism paints a brilliant portrait of its vivid reality.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
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