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Killing Strangers

How Political Violence Became Modern

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Killing Strangers

By: T. K. Wilson
Narrated by: Matthew Lloyd Davies
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About this listen

A bewildering feature of so much contemporary political violence is its stunning impersonality. Every major city center becomes a potential shooting gallery; and every metro system a potential bomb alley. Victims just happen, as the saying goes, to "be in the wrong place at the wrong time".

We accept this contemporary reality - at least to some degree. But we rarely ask: where has it come from historically? Killing Strangers tackles this question head on. It examines how such violence became "unchained" from interpersonal relationships. It traces the rise of such impersonal violence by examining violence in conjunction with changing social and political realities. In particular, it traces both "push" and "pull" - the ability of modern states to force the violence of their challengers into niche forms: and the disturbing new opportunities that technological changes offer to cause mayhem in fresh and original ways.

Killing Strangers therefore aims to highlight the very strangeness of contemporary experience when it is viewed against a long-term perspective. Atrocities regularly capture media attention - and just as quickly fade from public view. That is both tragic - and utterly predictable. Deep down we expect no different. So Killing Strangers deliberately asks the very simplest of questions. How on earth did we get here?

©2020 T. K. Wilson (P)2020 HighBridge, a division of Recorded Books
20th Century 21st Century Political Science
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THOUGHT PROVOKING AND TIMELY

Killing Strangers is an masterful overview of terrorist violence from the 18th Century to the present. It's most useful insights are its links between method and ideology. Most importantly acts of terrorism explored as spectacle and display. Thus whilst sabotage can do far greater damage to governance and the infrastructure of a country than bombs in tube trains, cafe's or public spaces, sabotage lacks the quality of spectacle that terrorists crave.
It is also incredibly pertinent, in the days following the insurrection and invasion of the Capitol building, in its exploration of US exceptionalism, with the right to bear arms enshrined in the constitution, thus in the US the state monopoly of violence has a less sure grip. Wilson is somewhat sanguine about this though after the events of January 6th I suspect he might want to revisit his conclusions.
An interesting and stimulating book that raises important questions about violence, both by state actors and terrorists.

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