Philippe Buc, Holy War, Martyrdom, and Terror: Christianity,Violence, and the West, Philadelphia: Univ. of Pennsylvania Press, 2015
Holy War, Martyrdom, and Terror examines the ways that
Christian theology has shaped centuries of conflict from the Jewish-Roman War
of late antiquity through the First Crusade, the French Revolution, and up to
the Iraq War. By isolating one factor among the many forces that converge in
war—the essential tenets of Christian theology—Philippe Buc locates
continuities in major episodes of violence perpetrated over the course of two
millennia. Even in secularized or explicitly non-Christian societies, such as the
Soviet Union of the Stalinist purges, social and political projects are tied to
religious violence, and religious conceptual structures have influenced the
ways violence is imagined, inhibited, perceived, and perpetrated.
The patterns that emerge from this sweeping history
upend commonplace assumptions about historical violence, while contextualizing
and explaining some of its peculiarities. Buc addresses the culturally
sanctioned logic that might lead a sane person to kill or die on principle,
traces the circuitous reasoning that permits contradictory political actions,
such as coercing freedom or pardoning war atrocities, and locates religious
faith at the backbone of nationalist conflict. He reflects on the contemporary
American ideology of war—one that wages violence in the name of abstract
notions such as liberty and world peace and that he reveals to be deeply rooted
in biblical notions. A work of extraordinary breadth, Holy War, Martyrdom, and
Terror connects the ancient past to the troubled present, showing how religious
ideals of sacrifice and purification made violence meaningful throughout
history.
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