Chapter 1 Genocide and Terrorism
Chapter 2 Initial Cases of Genocide: Nazi Germany, California
Indians
Chapter 3 The Everyday Illusion of Immortality and its
Disruption
Chapter 4 Further Cases of Genocide: Bosnia, Cambodia, Rwanda
Chapter 5 A Theory of Genocide and Terrorism
Chapter 6 Centering-Down Into the Immediate: Variations on the
Theme of Genocide
Chapter 7 Thinking the Unthinkable? A Religious Retardant to
Genocide and Terrorism?
Bruce Wilshire is Senior Professor of Philosophy at Rutgers University, New Brunswick, NJ.
Wilshire has taken what most people feel is unfathomable—genocide
and terrorism—and illuminated the web of dark forces that can
explode forth into such heinous acts. He allows us to see how the
cycles of suffering and anxiety work through our collective bodies
and group symbolism to trap us all within a nightmare of violence
and further suffering. Yet, he doesn't stop there, as he also shows
how we can awake from this nightmare through an unconventional
sense of the sacred, a way of boundary crossing found within
nature, and a different attunement to the universe. Bravo for
thinking through "the unthinkable!"
*Glen A. Mazis, author of Earthbodies and Emotion and
Embodiment*
This is a provocative, stimulating read. Highly recommended.
*Choice Reviews*
Bruce Wilshire's book Get 'Em All! Kill 'Em! is a fascinating and
important study of issues that could not be more crucial to our
perilous times. . . . I know of no other study that looks to these
utterly concrete, yet very elusive, roots of the major destructive
actions of the last one hundred years, continuing to this day. It
should stand by itself as a book that will draw a lot of attention
from the reading public as well as from academics who know
WIlshire's previously published distinguished work.
*Edward S. Casey, Professor of Philosophy, SUNY-Stonybrook*
Already well on his way with Wild Hunger; in Get 'Em All! Kill 'Em!
we find the distinctively original discursive style and thematic
substance of Bruce Wilshire. The engaging entwinement of style and
provocative, thought-provoking content just carried me along to the
end. A remarkable achievement!
*Calvin O. Schrag, George Ade Distinguished Professor of Philosophy
Emeritus, Purdue University*
It is not only the deceptively simple and lucid theory of genocide
that we must honor here, but the way in which Wilshire gradually
densifies and intensifies the theory, drawing us inexorably into
the dark heart of the world’s polarized present, at the sharp
tooth-edge of history and of our own possible extinction.
*David Abram, author ofThe Spell of the Sensuous*
This is philosophy that matters: soaring thought on a vital topic
expressed in an accessible, elegant style. Not everyone will agree
with Wilshire's understanding of genocide, but everyone needs to be
familiar with it. Wilshire is one of a vanishing breed of public
intellectuals who addresses the mind of our community and appeals
to its conscience. Must reading.
*John Lachs, Vanderbilt University*
Wilshire is a prophet of disaster and a child with saving news. We
find deep insight in this book — from the Qur’an and the Gospels,
from Tolstoy, Dostoevsky and William James. We learn from Emerson,
that great “optimist,” that along side a human hope is a
persisting, sudden, strange-uncanny — say the bare existence of
rats and lizards, who are no less a part of our surround than its
more noted inhabitants, and alien enough to challenge our grip on
those basal human comforts – hope, understanding, health: for what
are these to crawling things...? Of course, this is a book, as the
title says, on genocide and terror. But it’s also about compassion,
crucifixion, King Lear, "poor forked creatures," Black Elk; it
lives with that ancient epigraph on our lives: "many are the
wonders and terrors, but none more wonderful (and terrible) than
we. " It delivers an embodied human spirit, high and low and
mediocre, in the flow and out of it, getting ice cream and
wrestling with the unspeakable (which Wilshire so ably bespeaks).
He is a philosopher in the spirit of Emerson and James, on the go,
rushing at us like a Lion on the plain — then turning like a Greek
Chorus to reflect soberly on our plight — then turning lightly to
play in the curling surf for the moment numinous, enchanted.
*Edward F. Mooney, author of Selves in Discord and Resolve:
Essays in Kierkegaard's Moralreligious Psychology from Either/or to
Sickness unto De*
Wilshire's book is not only a good essay on genocide and terrorism,
but also an invitation to be intellectually prepared for countering
fundamentalism.
*Political Studies Review*
This is an epic study of genocide and terrorism. Congratulations on
a superb achievement and hopes for the widest dissemination and
discussion of the urgent issues it involves.
*Dr. Thomas Berry, author of The Dream of the Earth*
The prose is forceful, clear, and engaging. The examples are rich,
provocative, and far-reaching. Instead of lecturing at his readers.
. . . Wilshire invites them to join him in a journey of
intellectual exploration. It is philosophical in the admirable
tradition of William James. It is an excellent book.
*Richard Kamber, Chair, Philosophy and Religion, The College of New
Jersey*
Deep within our souls there is an archetype of genocide that
emerges in times of crisis and sears our historical understanding
so we no longer acknowledge moral tenets. Wilshire brings together
the diverse strands of genocidal events to demonstrate that at our
worst we are an embarrassment to the universe.
*Vine Deloria Jr., author of Red Earth, White Lies: Native
Americans and the Myth of Scientific Fact, God is Red: A Native
View of Religion, and many others*
Bruce Wilshire's interpretation of the genocidal impulse as a
response to the threat of the annihilation of an organized group's
whole cultural world is compelling and profound. Get 'Em All! Kill
'Em! will be of enormous interest to all those who are committed to
understanding the experience of being human.
*George Atwood, Professor of Psychology, Rutgers University*
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