This will be a short post.
This Summer, I have the privilege of being a Visiting Professor with the Religion und Politik Exzellenzcluster at the Westfälische Wilhelms-Universität Münster. I'll be giving a couple of talks on my research and also leading a doctoral seminar. The last of these is what I need help with. The topic of this seminar is (tentatively) titled "The Language of Holy War in Contemporary American Discourse." As you, dear reader, may well know, this is a subject I've tackled here on a number of occasions.
Anyway, I need to give the students a reading list for said seminar. I have a preliminary bibliography -- some good stuff there -- but I want to be sure there's not some interesting stuff that I'm just not missing. The internet's a big place after all and, despite my best efforts to not do any teaching, service, or any other research (just joking, dear administrator), I can't read everything.
So, can you all think of anything that I might want to include? Please use the comments below to add your thoughts and spread the word. Any and all suggestions are MOST welcome...

I recently read sociologist John R. Hall's book Apocalypse: From Antiquity to the Empire of Modernity (Cambridge: Polity, 2009), and he has quite a bit to say about apocalyptic rhetoric in terms of holy war--esp. for post-9/11 views on both sides, American and Muslim (as well as Crusades and Reformation). May be worth checking out.
ReplyDeleteI haven't seen this whole book, but it seems that it would provide a great example of how language of war enters at the ground level, and into popular culture via the soldiers. Wars always give us new words.
ReplyDeletehttp://store.pamphleteerpress.com/06.html
http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=7458809
This is pretty good, in case you don;t know it:
ReplyDeleteDaniel GUTWEIN and Sophia MENACHE, “Just War, Crusade and Jihad: Conflicting Propaganda Strategies During the Gulf Crisis (1990-1991)”, in Revue Belge de Philologie et d’Historie, vol. 80, 2002, p. 385-400
Thanks, all. Good stuff. Keep them coming...
ReplyDeleteSounds like a great seminar. I imagine you are already familiar with Bruce Holsinger's _Neomedievalism, Neoconservatism and the War on Terror_ (Chicago: Prickly Paradigm Press, 2007) - it's a great book that I have found appeals to students (probably because it is pocket-sized).
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