Defining Danger

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A01=James W Clarke
american
American Assassin
Author_James W Clarke
Bay Front Park
Blair House
Car Car Car Car
Category=JPWL
Charles Guiteau
criminal profiling
Domestic Terrorists
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extremist motivations
Family Estrangement
FBI Informant
forensic psychiatry
forensic psychology
Griselio Torresola
Insanity Defense Reform Act
Insanity Plea
Internal Revenue Service
Junior ROTC
Leon Czolgosz
Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory
Paranoid Schizophrenic
Pima Community College
political crime research
political violence analysis
Prominent Political Figure
psychological assessment of assassins
Richard III
Ruby Ridge
Sam Byck
Tate LaBianca Murders
Texas School Book Depository
Type IVs
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412845908
  • Weight: 612g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Feb 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Since 1789, when George Washington became the first president of the United States, forty-three men have held the nation's highest office. Four were killed by assassins,and serious attempts were made on the lives of eight others.Add to that list Martin Luther King, Jr. and Malcolm X,and it is reasonable to conclude that political prominence in the U.S. entails grave risks. In Defining Danger, James W. Clarke explores the cultural and psychological linkages that define assassinations and a new era of domestic terrorism in America.

Clarke notes an upsurge in political violence beginning with the assassination of John F. Kennedy in 1963. Since then, there have been ten assassination attempts on nationally prominent political leaders. That is two more than the eight recorded in the previous 174 years of the nation's presidential history. New elements of domestic terror in American life were introduced in the 1990s by Timothy McVeigh, the "Oklahoma City Bomber," Ted Kaczynski, the "Unabomber," and Eric Rudolph, the abortion clinic bomber. These men were politically motivated; their crimes were unprecedented. These events and the perpetrators behind them are among the subjects of this book.

Defining Danger conveys two central themes. The first is that individual acts of violence directed toward America's democratically elected leaders represent a defining element of American politics. The second addresses how danger is defined, through an analysis of the motives and characteristics of twenty-one perpetrators responsible for these acts of political violence where shots were fired, or bombs detonated, and in most instances, victims died. The book is written in an accessible and engaging style that will appeal to the informed general reader, as well as to professionals in a variety of fields—especially in the wake of recent events and the specter of future violence that, sadly, haunts us all.

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