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Theoterrorism v. Freedom of Speech: From Incident to Precedent [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 250 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 1080 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Feb-2019
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • ISBN-10: 9463722726
  • ISBN-13: 9789463722728
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 250 pages, kõrgus x laius: 234x156 mm, kaal: 1080 g
  • Ilmumisaeg: 14-Feb-2019
  • Kirjastus: Amsterdam University Press
  • ISBN-10: 9463722726
  • ISBN-13: 9789463722728
Teised raamatud teemal:
The Rushdie Affair, the Danish Cartoon Affair, the assault on Charlie Hebdo, and the earlier Carrell Affair, are examples of religious fanatics' extreme reactions to religious satire and criticism. Perpetrators of these actions consider themselves as true believers. This book aims to understand their motives by means of the concept of theoterrorism: terrorism grounded in religious zealotry.

Arvustused

"Cliteur provides extensive analysis of [ the Rudi Carrell] episodes and their implications, before exploring further theoterrorist attacks on expression, including the slaying of the filmmaker Theo Van Gogh in 2004, the "Danish Cartoons Affair" of 2005, and the murderous attack on the staff of Charlie Hebdo in 2015. And he spends considerable space examining the arguments of those in the West who have defended the suppression of blasphemous speech on the grounds that great offence may be taken by religious believers." - Rumy Hasan, August 2019, Quillette.com

"Academics limited by political correctness" - read Maarten Boudry's opinion piece for the NRC here.

"Paul Cliteur has written an important book. Its a disturbing and enlightening read. Disturbing because it unveils how Western democracies since the mid 80s have reacted with confusion and disorientation when freedom of expression has been under attack. Enlightening because Cliteur brilliantly deconstructs the cognitive dissonance among politicians, intellectuals and the media and provides us with the analytical tools to understand whats at stake. Cliteur lays bare the logic and consequences of our muted and incoherent response to threats of violence in the name of God. A book about freedom and safety for all of us." - Flemming Rose, Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute, Washington D.C.

"A topical and timely book, presented in a way that is accessible and even entertaining - though also worrying in the tendencies that it identifies." - Russell Blackford, Senior Lecturer at the University of Newcastle.

Introduction 9(2)
Bassam Tibi
Preface 11(10)
1 The Rudi Carrell Affair in Germany
21(2)
Carrell v. Khomeini
23(1)
Khomeini's letter to Gorbachev
24(3)
The I ran-Iraq War
27(2)
Carrell's earlier spoofs
29(2)
Apologies to Iran
31(3)
More apologies and more controversies
34(1)
A new film
35(4)
2 The Rudi Carrell Affair in the Netherlands
39(26)
A discussion between the minister and a journalist
40(3)
The Dutch Parliament on the Carrell Affair
43(2)
Carrell and other affairs
45(3)
The importance of humor
48(1)
The Carrell Affair as precedent
49(2)
Telephone justice
51(2)
The meaning of Carrell's apology
53(2)
Subdued tone of conversation
55(2)
A new sort of religious behavior
57(3)
Sense of humor and human emotions
60(1)
Not about freedom of the press
61(4)
3 The Coherence of Theoterrorism
65(32)
Aboutaleb: the Mayor of Rotterdam
69(3)
The "village idiot" of Amsterdam
72(4)
The theoterrorists' profession of faith
76(2)
The Woolwich attack
78(2)
The Woolwich attack and the London bombings of 2005
80(1)
The Woolwich attack and the murder of Van Gogh
81(2)
The theoterrorists argument analyzed
83(2)
Theocracy and democracy
85(1)
Two schools of thought
86(4)
The debate about the role of Islam
90(1)
Attacks on mosques
91(2)
The Netherlands, Denmark, and Great Britain
93(4)
4 The Danish Cartoon Affair
97(26)
What are cartoons?
99(1)
Terrorizing the laicist state
100(2)
In good faith
102(2)
Why were the cartoons published?
104(3)
What did the Cartoon Affair prove?
107(1)
The dark sides of globalization
107(2)
Reactions to the cartoons
109(2)
Shouting fire and "senseless provocation"
111(1)
Can only Muslims criticize Islam?
112(1)
Tony Benn's call to "respect" for religion
113(1)
Thomas Jefferson's religious heterodoxy
114(2)
From cartoons to scholarly work: Jytte Klausen
116(2)
The refusal of Yale University Press to republish the cartoons
118(3)
Attacks and convictions
121(2)
5 The Rushdie Affair and Charles Taylor
123(36)
Backing for Khomeini's judgment in the Iranian Parliament
125(2)
Khamenei's sermon on the Rushdie Affair
127(2)
The Islamist response
129(2)
Rushdie's apology
131(2)
Not a clash of civilizations but of visions
133(2)
The secular West against the religious Rest?
135(5)
Rushdie's own defense: the centrality of doubt
140(3)
The debate about revelation
143(2)
The right to express a humanist view of life
145(3)
"Wade through a filthy drain"
148(2)
The multiculturalist response of Taylor, Dummett, and others
150(3)
The later Taylor
153(6)
6 The Rushdie Affair and Michael Dummett
159(40)
The legal and the moral
161(3)
Michael Dummett and the cause of anti-racism
164(2)
Dummett on Rushdie
166(3)
The tragedy of being an honorary white
169(2)
Whose pain?
171(4)
President Carter on the role of religion in brokering peace
175(3)
Rushdie knew what he was doing
178(2)
Rushdie, Nietzsche, Freud, and Spinoza
180(1)
Contemporary iconoclasts despised
181(2)
The realist response of John Berger and John Le Carre
183(1)
John Le Carre revisited and book burning
184(3)
Withdraw the book until a calmer time has come
187(1)
The political response and the press
188(2)
Some reactions by foreign states
190(1)
Other religious leaders
191(3)
Is reaching out a wise course to take?
194(5)
7 Modern hostage taking
199(24)
Hostage taking in general
201(3)
Modern hostage taking
204(2)
Why modern hostage taking is so effective
206(4)
Contagious indignation
210(3)
The Kouachi Brothers' final declaration of loyalty
213(2)
Coda
215(2)
Their force or our weakness?
217(3)
Solutions
220(3)
References 223(24)
Index 247
Paul Cliteur is professor of jurisprudence at the University of Leiden. He has been visiting professor at the University of California Hastings College of the Law, and at Ghent University. He is the author of The Secular Outlook (2010) and coeditor of The Fall and Rise of Blasphemy Law (2016).