ABSTRACT

This book offers a multifaceted, analytical account of counterterrorism argumentative speech.

Traditionally, existing scholarship in this field of research has taken a selective focus on issues and actors, concentrating mainly on US state discourse after 9/11. However, this approach ignores the fact that there was counterterrorism speech before 9/11, and that there are other countries and other actors who also actively engage in the counterterrorism discursive field, both within and outside of the Western world.

Addressing several thematic, chronological and methodological gaps in the current literature, Arguing Counterterrorism offers a dynamic perspective on counterterrorism argumentative speech. Over the course of the volume, the authors tackle the following key issues: first, historical and cultural continuity and change. Second, the phenomenology of counterterrorism speech: its nature, instrumentalisation, implications and interactions between the various actors involved. The third theme is the anatomy of counterterrorism speech; namely its political, cultural and linguistic constitutive elements. Employing a multi-disciplinary framework, the authors explore these issues through a geographically and historically diverse range of case studies, resulting in a book that broadens the perspective of counterterrorism argumentation analysis.

This book will be of much interest to students of critical terrorism studies, counterterrorism, discourse analysis, security studies and IR.

part |68 pages

Roots and cultures

chapter |19 pages

The power of terrorism frames

Responses to non-Islamist lone-wolf terrorism in Europe

part |106 pages

Phenomenology

chapter |26 pages

Between insurrection and “reformism”

Public discourses of twenty-first century Greek armed groups

chapter |19 pages

Plenty of oxygen

Terrorism, news media and the politics of the Australian security state

chapter |21 pages

Jihadist terrorism in Europe

What role for media?

chapter |18 pages

Counterterrorism as contested terrain

Performative contradictions and “autoimmune disorder”

part |93 pages

Anatomy

chapter |20 pages

The elusive essence of evil

Constructing Otherness in the coalition of the willing

chapter |26 pages

The discourse on political Islam and the “War on Terror”

Roots, policy implications and potential for change

chapter |23 pages

The multiple contexts of Russian counterterrorism frames

The framing process and discursive field

chapter |22 pages

The hunter and the hunted

Metaphors of pursuit, prey and the intractability of difference in post 9/11 American counterterrorism discourse