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Matthew Carr

    Les Diables de Cardona (French Edition)
    Fortress Europe : inside the war against immigration
    The Infernal Machine
    • The Infernal Machine

      • 416 Seiten
      • 15 Lesestunden

      In 1881, a group of Russian revolutionaries, identifying as "terrorists," assassinated Tsar Nicholas II in a dramatic bombing in St. Petersburg. Contrary to the portrayal of these individuals as psychopathic murderers in the Russian press, they believed their actions were a just response to tyranny. Today, political violence is often seen as a modern evil, yet contemporary terrorist organizations are rooted in a long-standing tradition that began in nineteenth-century Europe. This work chronicles significant episodes of terrorist violence throughout history, weaving together a compelling narrative that highlights the complex motivations behind such actions. Writer and journalist Matthew Carr illustrates that terrorist violence, while deplorable, is employed by groups with diverse political aims. The responses to these acts have frequently involved even greater violence, as seen in Ireland, Kenya, Algeria, and Uruguay, where governments have used terrorist attacks as justification for severe countermeasures, often at the expense of civil liberties and democratic institutions. This concise and insightful narrative provides a historical context that sheds light on our current challenges, offering a dramatic reframing of the issues facing our world today.

      The Infernal Machine
      3,8
    • Revised and updated for 2015, Matthew Carr provides an urgent investigation into Europe's militarised borders. In a series of searing dispatches, he speaks to border officers and police, officials, migrants, asylum-seekers and activists from across the continent in a ground-breaking critique of an epic political, institutional and humanitarian failure that now threatens the future of the European Union itself.

      Fortress Europe : inside the war against immigration
    • 1584. Le prêtre de Belamar de la Sierra, un petit village d'Aragon à la frontière avec la France, est assassiné, son église profanée. Sur les murs : des inscriptions en arabe. Est-ce l'oeuvre de celui qui se fait appeler le Rédempteur, dont tout le monde ignore l'identité, et qui a promis l'extermination de tous les chrétiens, avec la même violence que celle exercée sur les musulmans ? La plupart des habitants de la région sont en effet des morisques, convertis de force au catholicisme, et qui pratiquent encore l'islam en secret. A la veille d'une visite royale, Bernardo de Mendoza, magistrat à Valladolid, soldat et humaniste, issu d'une famille juive, est chargé de l'enquête. Très vite, les tensions s'exacerbent entre les communautés, une véritable guerre de religion se profile. Et les meurtres continuent, toujours aussi inexplicables. Entre l'Inquisition et les extrémistes morisques et chrétiens, la tâche de Mendoza va se révéler ardue. Historien et spécialiste des religions, Matthew Carr nous transporte dans un XVIe siècle d'un réalisme époustouflant. Sa connaissance des moeurs de l'époque, son sens de l'intrigue, son empathie pour ses personnages, font de ce plaidoyer pour la liberté une oeuvre inoubliable.

      Les Diables de Cardona (French Edition)