Blood that cries out from the earth : the psychology of religious terrorism. / James William Jones.

By: Jones, James WilliamContributor(s): James William JonesMaterial type: TextTextPublisher number: Donated by Prof. J P Gupta.Publication details: , Oxford : Oxford University Press , 2008Description: xviii, 190 pages ; 22 cmISBN: 9780195335972Subject(s): Terrorism | Terrorism Religious aspects | Psychology of religionDDC classification: 201.763 JON
Contents:
Introduction: Religion, psychology, and terrorism Religion and terrorism: the need for a multidimensional model Jihadism in comparative perspective: psychological themes in religiously motivated terrorism Aum Shinrikyo: violence and terrorism in Japanese Buddhism The divine terrorist: religion and violence in American apocalyptic Christianity The role of the individual: toward a clinical psychology of religious terrorism What does this tell us about religion?
Summary: Religious terrorism has become the scourge of the modern world. What causes a person to kill innocent strangers in the name of religion? As both a clinical psychologist and an authority on comparative religion, James W. Jones is uniquely qualified to address this increasingly urgent question. Research on the psychology of violence shows that several factors work to make ordinary people become dangerous to others. These include feelings of humiliation or shame, a tendency to see the world in black and white, and demonization or dehumanization of other people. Authoritarian religion, Jones shows, is a particularly rich source of such ideas and feelings, which he finds throughout the writings of Islamic jihadists such as the 9/11 conspirators. Jones goes on to apply this model to two very different religious groups that have engaged in violence: Aum Shinrikyo, the Buddhist splinter group behind the sarin gas attacks in the Tokyo subway system, and members of the extreme religious right in the United States who have advocated and committed violence against abortion providers.
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201.763 JON (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available G3000
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Introduction: Religion, psychology, and terrorism
Religion and terrorism: the need for a multidimensional model
Jihadism in comparative perspective: psychological themes in religiously motivated terrorism
Aum Shinrikyo: violence and terrorism in Japanese Buddhism
The divine terrorist: religion and violence in American apocalyptic Christianity
The role of the individual: toward a clinical psychology of religious terrorism
What does this tell us about religion?

Religious terrorism has become the scourge of the modern world. What causes a person to kill innocent strangers in the name of religion? As both a clinical psychologist and an authority on comparative religion, James W. Jones is uniquely qualified to address this increasingly urgent question. Research on the psychology of violence shows that several factors work to make ordinary people become dangerous to others. These include feelings of humiliation or shame, a tendency to see the world in black and white, and demonization or dehumanization of other people. Authoritarian religion, Jones shows, is a particularly rich source of such ideas and feelings, which he finds throughout the writings of Islamic jihadists such as the 9/11 conspirators. Jones goes on to apply this model to two very different religious groups that have engaged in violence: Aum Shinrikyo, the Buddhist splinter group behind the sarin gas attacks in the Tokyo subway system, and members of the extreme religious right in the United States who have advocated and committed violence against abortion providers.

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