J. Peter Burgess
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Terror and disenchantment
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This chapter develops the relation between the experience of extraordinary events such as terrorist attacks and the sense we make of them. Returning to the notion of disenchantment developed in the book’s Introduction, the chapter tries to articulate what an experience of terrorism is and how we are changed by it. It revisits the foundations of what we call experience and asks under what conditions it can be surpassed. The chapter turns to a key experience of the unthinkable in the experience of mourning, before asking to what extent violence in general is implicit in the neoliberal forms of thought that organise our everyday lives, and the links to excess and extremism that they imply. The chapter further deepens the concept of ‘the unthinkable’. It develops the notion of the unthinkable in the direction of aesthetic experience, itself linked to recently developed theories of affect. Insecurity, it is argued, is linked to an experience of senses, which exceeds in vital ways the experience captured by rationality.

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Security after the unthinkable

Terror and disenchantment in Norway

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