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Blood and Rage: A Cultural history of Terrorism [Hardcover]

Michael Burleigh
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 320 pages
  • Publisher: HarperPress; illustrated edition edition (18 Feb 2008)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0007241275
  • ISBN-13: 978-0007241279
  • Product Dimensions: 23.4 x 14.8 x 4.4 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (13 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 221,442 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Michael Burleigh
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Review

'Magisterial…broad in scope, powerful in its argument and brimming with healthy rage. (Burleigh's section on Islamist terrorism) sees him at his polemical best, exposing the multiple hypocrisies - and lazy thinking - of the Islamist terrorist with a sharpened pen…A riveting book.' Evening Standard

‘This timely and important books' relevance is embracing. [Burleigh] is a clear–eyed historian…he sets his targets in context…and then pulverises them with an orderly and ceaseless barrage of facts. “Blood & Rage” is in all sorts of ways an outstanding book.’ Daily Telegraph

‘A magisterial tome, broad in scope, powerful in argument and brimming with healthy rage…[a] riveting book.’ Spectator

'The clearest, sanest and most knowledgeable voice is increasingly that of the historian Michael Burleigh. No one writes so well or so reliably, and this powerful book will give another boost to his reputation.' Daily Mail

'Written in Burleigh's usual cogent and trenchant style, the book can be highly recommended.' Sunday Telegraph

‘Burleigh's evident ability to assimilate and communicate incisively…a highly intelligent and comprehensive survey of recent terrorism.’ The Observer

‘In this volume, the handiwork of terrorists over the course of a century and a half is described with remorseless, stomach-turning attention to detail…Burleigh's greatest virtue as a chronicler of violence is that he always lets the facts speak for themselves.’ Mail on Sunday

‘Rich, dense and polemical…a deft and judicious guide. The anger that informs the book is seldom allowed to cloud the author's judgement.’ The Spectator

‘Caustic and forthright…Burleigh offers a witty, robust and self–confident guide to a subject that regrettably now affects all our lives to some degree.’ Daily Express

‘Makes rollicking good reading…Burleigh is good at analysing the response to terrorism.' Sunday Times

‘His barely suppressed rage, not only at the casual cruelty he describes, but also at the weaselly excuses and justifications of the terrorists' apologists, make his book - though far from a rant - a refreshing douche of cold anger at our weak postmodern moral evasions.' Sunday Times

‘[a] rich, dense and polemical primer on the modern history of political violence…full of rewarding detail.’ Spectator

‘Burleight offers a witty, robust and self-confident guide to a subject that regrettably now affects all our lives to some degree.’ Daily Express

‘In this volume, the handiwork of terrorists over the course of a century and a half is described with remoreseless, stomach-turning detail…Burleigh’s greatest virtue as a chronicler of violence is that he always lets the facts speak for themselves.’ Mail on Sunday

‘’Blood and Rage’ is undoubtedly ambitious…[and] Burleigh’s evident ability to assimilate and communicate incisively is perfect.’ Observer

‘’Blood and Rage’ is in all sorts of ways an outstanding book; it is also fuelled by the manic energy and focus of someone accelerating a truckload of intellectual high-explosives into the gates of a ‘stunningly credulous soft-liberal establishment, composed of ‘colluding’ human rights lawyers and ‘celebrity useful idiots’’ Telegraph

‘The conservative historian Michael Burleigh has entered the fray with a more magesterial tome, broad in scope, powerful in argument and brimming with healthy rage’ Scotsman

‘His writing is direct, tough-minded and surprisingly positive about a subject that otherwise invites depression and pessimism…when victory is finally secured, after much pain for Mankind, future historians will cite books like ‘Blood and Rage’ as having shown us the way through the carnage.’ Waterstone’s Books Quarterly

‘[“Earthly Powers”] is no dry academic thesis, but a passionate, highly opinionated…survey of the damage done to European civilisation by various creeds…fascinating, important and thought-provoking.’ Sunday Telegraph

Mail on Sunday

'Burleigh's greatest virtue as a chronicler of violence is that he always lets the facts speak for themselves.'

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Front Cover | Copyright | Table of Contents | Excerpt | Index | Back Cover
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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
Disappointing 8 Feb 2011
By E. LYON
Format:Paperback
Michael Burleigh wrote a well-received history of the Third Reich some years ago, so I thought that this would be a well-researched, balanced and useful book.

I was much mistaken.

There are a number of errors made on things I do know about, like the Troubles in Northern Ireland. This undermines my faith when Burleigh's talking about things about which I know nothing. For example, the old canard about the 'IRA = I Ran Away' graffiti's repeated. As Brian Hanley's shown in History Ireland, there's a single, unreliable source for this, who claimed to have seen graffiti of which there are no photographs. Again, Burleigh claims that the Red Army Faction had 'extensive' contacts with the IRA. These appear to be contacts known solely to himself. And there's the rather bizarre claim that IRA prisoners could exert such dominance over a prison that many prison officers committed suicide. No source for this, interesting though it'd be to follow up.

There's also some dishonesty involved. When he says that Sinn Fein got 65% of the vote in the 'southern' 26 counties of Ireland and 48% throughout the island as a whole in the general election of 1918, it's easy to forget that Sinn Fein won 73 of 105 seats and that some seats were uncontested, so presumably had no vote.

Again, when talking about the anarchists he declares that there was an anarchist 'Black International' in the late 19th and early 20th centuries because there was an anarchist conference of five people in 1881, which did not 'reconvene' until 1907. Which would suggest to me that there was not in fact an anarchist international plotting murder and assassination.

The mixture of error, dishonesty and perverse interpretation of evidence leads me to give the book a poor score.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Burleigh is a conservative in the style of Michael Oakeshott. He believes that the best chance of a peaceful global future is to repel terrorist ideology and its exponents with greater vigour than Europe has mustered up to now. Europe contains enough human rights lawyers, race relations experts and left liberal academics to defend the rights of terrorists. What is needed is a passionate counter-attack on terrorism and its defenders.
There is no mistaking Burleigh's moral outlook: terrorists are to blame for the mayhem they inflict, not governments or their security forces. The most skilled terrorists (Abu Nidal, Carlos the Jackal) quickly descend into graft and corruption, except for a few lucky veterans who have comfortable posts at American universities. Terrorists are globalised and seek access to nuclear technology. The security services need to do better.

This is a big, incisive cultural history of some of the most prominent terrorist groups in the last 150 years. Burleigh doesn't attempt any grand cause-and-effect explanation of the phenomenon. There will always be grievances and some groups will seize on the modern technology of the bomb and the bullet, kidnapping, hijacking and extortion to (in their eyes) move history on. On the other hand, he concludes that the rage of terrorism can subside. Many ideological causes which underpinned terrorism have passed into oblivion.
It is a surprisingly upbeat conclusion from a writer who does not conceal his own outrage at the indiscriminate mayhem perpetrated by terrorists in the name of Liberty, world revolution, utopia and "true" Islam. But Burleigh is not a fan of Washington's neo-cons and George Bush's "War on Terror" either. He is more convinced of the effectiveness of smarter psychological tactics to "turn" the radicals, as in Saudi Arabia's programmeto wean low-level jihadists off violence, using similar methods to those used to retrieve victims of sinister cults. The "war on terror" takes time. The Cold War lasted from 1947 to 1989. "On that calendar, we are on the equivalent of 1953 in the struggle with the jihad-salafis".

But the West is still its own worst enemy. Terrorists organised freely in "Londonistan" and in England's northern cities, protected by "community leaders" and left-liberal "multiculturism". European universities in the 1970s, treasuring free speech, allowed the Red Brigades and Baader Meinhof to recruit and spread the "revolutionary" message of Euro-neo-Marxism. The security services in Britain were slow to switch from penetrating the IRA and loyalist paramilitaries to learning Arabic and Urdu as a preliminary to paying visits to the mosques of Bradford and Birmingham.
Burleigh approaches terrorism as an anthropologist would investigate an exotic tribe, a tribe with its own oral history, spiritual values and rituals. This certainly works for the anarchists and nihilists in the 19th century, and the jihadis of the 21st. A form of political religion offers them a utopian vision and justifies atrocities which are in fact forbidden by all monotheistic religions. But it is less plausible when applied to the South African ANC in its campaign of sabotage in the 1980s. The ANC leadership and the South African Communist Party were certainly willing to kill civilians as well as the security forces in their anti-apartheid campaign, but it was clearly a tactic in their campaign to seize power, and it went parallel with covert negotiations with the regime.
There is a strong chapter in this book on Islamic terrorism. Tracing its modern twentieth century version back to Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini, who seized leadership of the Muslim world from the nationalist dictators and generals after 1970, Burleigh shows how Khomeini created a strong ideological cocktail, mixing Islamic purity with popular anti-Americanism. This was exported to the Middle East through Hezbollah, and it enabled Muslims to unite around the Arab-Israeli dispute. But beyond removing Israel from the map, the ultimate aim, increasingly trumpeted by Al-Qaida, was a new Muslim caliphate, achieved by asymmetric warfare - the heroes would not be Arab armies, but hijackers and suicide bombers.

This is a passionate and thrustful work of intense scholarship. It is short of broad analytical themes Committed left-liberal readers of the New York Times and The Guardian will certainly not give it five stars for inclusiveness. They will wish to raise a debate about "state terror" and wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. And they will probably prefer to read books with a more nuanced attitude to terrorists. Perhaps the sanest of these is Robert Fisk's account of the Middle East conflict The Great War for Civilisation (Harper, 2006). Burleigh is at his best in Earthly Powers (Harper,2005) and Sacred Causes (Harper, 2006). These two earlier works are a matchless portrayal of terrorism, religion and politics from Robespierre to Bin Laden.
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25 of 32 people found the following review helpful
Readable but Lacking 28 April 2008
Format:Hardcover
Overall, I was disappointed with book. It is a potted history of several terrorist conflicts, unsurprisingly focusing on the most recents ones within the last 40 years. It gives very little insight into common themes between conflicts, why and how they occur, what sustains them and why they end. It touches on, but doesn't really explore the link and crossover between terrorism and criminality.

The only theme that comes through consistently is Burleigh's total contempt for terrorists and their idealology. This is done through acid one liners which show the moral bankcruptcy and double standards of the terrorist whenever they try and justify their actions. This is fine (though this does get tedious towrds the end) and I can't disagree with him, but it doesn't explain why terrorists will maintain community support (however passive) for their actions and so that they campaign for decades with a constant stream of recruits and funds.

Where Burleigh gets himself worked up into a ferment of rage and loathing is the last section on Islamic terrorism. In some ways it's one the better sections as it's more than just a quick run through of characters and terrorist atrocities (perhaps because the number of incidents has been smaller, although each has been on a much larger scale). Here for Burleigh the liberal lawmaking elite of the Western democracies (shameful left leaning lawyers, worthless asylum laws and benefit handouts for all, are consisted derided) and the poorly co-ordinated security services are almost as much to blame as radical islamic clerics. I feel that Burleigh really just wanted to write about this subject, but for whatever reason thought to expand it to a more general work on terrorism. One final gripe, tying into this, is his constant references to "Londonistan" all through the book. It's as though the final section was on his mind all the time he was writing.

To be fair though it is a good read that keeps up a decent pace, and can serve as good introduction to the terrorist conflicts it covers. For me, I found the part on the Red Brigades and the RAF particularly interesting having little knowledge about these conflicts prior to reading the book.

Overall, you won't be bored reading the book, and it might even get you thinking a little, but if you're expecting deep insight and analysis, you're best looking elsewhere.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
Polemic rather than historical analysis
It really is alarming how easily the right have come to dominate the history profession and guide its narrative. Read more
Published 13 months ago by Chuck E
Wonderful service from this bookseller
The original book got lost in the post but this bookseller responded really well by immediately offering to refund our money and sending out a second copy. Read more
Published 17 months ago by Elaine
An excellent guide for troubled times.
As usual another top notch Burleigh book. One can only admire the man as he takes pot shots at the 'liberal' left and other knee-jerk reactionaries. Read more
Published 23 months ago by Bobby Smith
Fails at its stated goal
This is a bemusing book. Dennis Jewell, above, rightly says in his review that "Burleigh doesnt go sniffing around for "root causes" ... Read more
Published 24 months ago by M. Bayliss
Sardonic and exceptional
A first-class book about the history of terrorism. Sardonic and exceptionally well-written, it pans across countries, cultures, high politics and the torture methods of... Read more
Published on 28 Dec 2009 by Gregory Waggett
A terrorist is a criminal with a false cause and a distorted sense of...
I enjoyed this book. It was all the better for not making theories, or grand strategies, bit for its straightforward description of people and events. Read more
Published on 3 Oct 2009 by Dr. Nicholas P. G. Davies
THE ACTS THEMSELVES
Burleigh doesnt go sniffing around for "root causes" which is why he tends to upset the liberal left so much. This is a book filled with the acts and the consequences of terror. Read more
Published on 17 April 2009 by Dennis B. Jewell
Fear the Praetorians more than the Barbarians?
Burleigh's book is raw, historical background which by volume would do credit to a good research assistant but, by value, needs editing and organisation. Read more
Published on 25 Jun 2008 by Stewart Murray
a brave and fearless analysis
I enjoyed, and felt educated by, this book. Unlike the previous reviewer I had not read any of the author's other work, and so remain uncontaminated by earlier facts and their... Read more
Published on 17 Mar 2008 by DT
A disappointment
Having enjoyed "The Third Reich" and "Sacred Causes", I was looking forward to this book. Sadly it did not live up to my expectations. Read more
Published on 14 Mar 2008 by Seamus Mcneill
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