March 07 Book Club Meeting

Terror in the Mind of God, by Mark Juergensmeier

 

 

Photos
 
Where:  Casa Barb and Don Margerum
1897 San Leandro Lane (way out by San Ysidro)
969-1308
 
The Book - we'll be discussing the very readable Terror in the Mind of God, by Mark Juergensmeier, an attempt to correlate international violence and religion. Here are some short reviews from Amazon:

Survey of Religious terrorism, February 27, 2006
Reviewer: Daryl DeSimone "guidograd" (Monterey California) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Excellent book covering all the major religions and their terrorists. I would recommend this book to anyone looking for a scholarly survey or someone looking to make more sense of the world.

Many of the cases explored are chilling in their cold bloodedness, but the author makes all of them eminently understandable.
Juergensmeyer has done his research!, October 11, 2005
Reviewer: C. Gilbert "Artillerist" (Arlington, TX) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This book is being used in a Terrorism seminar class that I am taking and for good reason. Juergensmeyer does not rely wholly on second hand information but has actually visited and spoken with those accused and some even convicted of terror and gives a perspective that only a first hand knowledge would provide. This is an excellent insight into the minds of true idealists with a bent on death and destruction.

Religion and Violence in a postmodern context, June 9, 2005

Reviewer: Andrew Lumpkin "Divinity Student" (Winston-Salem, NC) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
As a comparative cultural study of religious terrorism, Mark Juergensmeyer attempts to explain how and why religion and violence are linked. Juergensmeyer analyzes recent incidents of global religious terrorism in order to illumine overarching patterns that heighten the risk of religious violence. Splitting his book into two parts, Juergensmeyer, first, highlights examples of religious terrorism within the Christian, Jewish, Muslim, Sikh, and Buddhist traditions. The author interviews religious leaders and activists within cultures of violence present in each of these traditions. In the second part of the book, Juergensmeyer identifies those characteristics that enhance the likelihood of religion becoming violent.