The Barren Sacrifice

An Essay on Political Violence

Paul Dumouchel author Mary Baker translator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Michigan State University Press

Published:1st Nov '15

Should be back in stock very soon

The Barren Sacrifice cover

According to political theory, the primary function of the modern state is to protect its citizens—both from each other and from external enemies. Yet it is the states that essentially commit major forms of violence, such as genocides, ethnic cleansings, and large-scale massacres, against their own citizens. In this book Paul Dumouchel argues that this paradoxical reversal of the state’s primary function into violence against its own members is not a mere accident but an ever-present possibility that is inscribed in the structure of the modern state. Modern states need enemies to exist and to persist, not because they are essentially evil but because modern politics constitutes a violent means of protecting us against our own violence. If they cannot—if we cannot—find enemies outside the state, they will find them inside. However, this institution is today coming to an end, not in the sense that states are disappearing, but in the sense that they are increasingly failing to protect us from our own violence. That is why the violent sacrifices that they ask from us, in wars and even in times of peace, have now become barren.

2016 CHOICE Magazine Outstanding Academic Titles — 2016 CHOICE Magazine Outstanding Academic Titles

ISBN: 9781611861839

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

241 pages