Downloads

New Books Catalogue Autumn/Winter 2013New Books Catalogue Spring/Summer 2013

Plu Social

Blog Twitter Facebook

Newsletters

Signup now

Book of the Week

Secret Manoeuvres in the Dark
Shortlisted for the London Radical Bookfair Bread and Roses Award
Competitions Jobs

Sociology


Click to enlarge image

From primatology to ancient Greece and Rome to the Bible, ...

(Dan Stone, Professor of Modern History, )

This is a most interesting and disturbing book. ... It ...

(Sabby Sagall, former senior lecturer in )

The Origins of Violence
Religion, History and Genocide

Product Description

Genocide is commonly understood to be a terrible aberration in human behaviour, performed by evil, murderous regimes such as the Nazis and dictators like Suharto and Pinochet. John Docker argues that the roots of genocide go far deeper into human nature than most people realise.

Genocide features widely in the Bible, the literature of ancient Greece and Rome, and debates about the Enlightenment. These texts are studied in depth to trace the origins of violence through time and across civilisations. Developing the groundbreaking work of Raphaël Lemkin, who invented the term 'genocide', Docker guides us from the dawn of agricultural society, through classical civilisation to the present, showing that violence between groups has been integral to all periods of history.

This revealing book will be of great interest to those wishing to understand the roots of genocide and why it persists in the modern age.

About The Author

John Docker is Adjunct Senior Research Fellow, Humanities Research Centre, Australian National University. He is the author of 1492: The Poetics of Diaspora (2001), Postmodernism and Popular Culture (1994) and (with Ann Curthoys) Is History Fiction? (2005).

Click to browse contents

Prices