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(2011) Byron and the politics of freedom and terror, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan.
Byronic terror and impossible exchange
from Werner to Baudrillard's the spirit of terrorism
Piya Pal-Lapinski
pp. 182-195
First prize for cerebral coldbloodedness goes to the French philosopher Jean Baudrillard, in his slim little book THE SPIRIT OF TERRORISM AND REQUIEM FOR THE TWIN TOWERS (Verso, paper, $13). “In terms of collective drama,” he writes, “we can say that the horror for the 4,000 victims of dying in those towers was inseparable from the horror of living in them—the horror of living and working in sarcophagi of concrete and steel.” It takes a rare, demonic genius to brush off the slaughter of thousands on the grounds that they were suffering from severe ennui brought about by boring modern architecture.2
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Full citation:
Pal-Lapinski, P. (2011)., Byronic terror and impossible exchange: from Werner to Baudrillard's the spirit of terrorism, in M. J. A. Green & P. Pal-Lapinski (eds.), Byron and the politics of freedom and terror, Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, pp. 182-195.
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