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1: Fighting Talk (1959–69): From the Peace Movement to the Revolutionary Legitimacy of Violence
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Sarah Colvin
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Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface xi
- Acknowledgments xiii
- Note on the Text xv
- Introduction: Terrorists, Language, and the State 1
- 1: Fighting Talk (1959–69): From the Peace Movement to the Revolutionary Legitimacy of Violence 21
- 2: The Personal Is Political (1966–70): From Feminism to a Language for the Revolution 50
- 3: The Shrinking Circle (1970–72): From Die Rote Armee aufbauen to the May Bombings 79
- 4: Drawing a Line Between the Enemy and Ourselves: The Language Trap 116
- 5: Violence as Identity: Prison Writing, 1972–76 149
- 6: Violence as a Woman’s Identity? Terrorism and Gender 188
- Conclusion: From Warrior Revolutionaries to Logical Fallacies: Language, Violence, and Identity 225
- Works Cited 237
- Index 251
Chapters in this book
- Frontmatter i
- Contents vii
- Preface xi
- Acknowledgments xiii
- Note on the Text xv
- Introduction: Terrorists, Language, and the State 1
- 1: Fighting Talk (1959–69): From the Peace Movement to the Revolutionary Legitimacy of Violence 21
- 2: The Personal Is Political (1966–70): From Feminism to a Language for the Revolution 50
- 3: The Shrinking Circle (1970–72): From Die Rote Armee aufbauen to the May Bombings 79
- 4: Drawing a Line Between the Enemy and Ourselves: The Language Trap 116
- 5: Violence as Identity: Prison Writing, 1972–76 149
- 6: Violence as a Woman’s Identity? Terrorism and Gender 188
- Conclusion: From Warrior Revolutionaries to Logical Fallacies: Language, Violence, and Identity 225
- Works Cited 237
- Index 251