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University of California Press

About the Book

What compels a person to strap a vest loaded with explosives onto his body and blow himself up in a crowded street? Scholars have answered this question by focusing on the pathology of the “terrorist mind” or the “brainwashing” practices of terrorist organizations. In Caravan of Martyrs, David Edwards argues that we need to understand the rise of suicide bombing in relation to the cultural beliefs and ritual practices associated with sacrifice.

Before the war in Afghanistan began, the sacrificial killing of a sheep demonstrated a tribe’s desire for peace. After the Soviet invasion of 1979, as thousands of people were killed, sacrifice took on new meanings. The dead were venerated as martyrs, but this informal conferral of status on the casualties of war soon became the foundation for a cult of martyrs exploited by political leaders for their own advantage. This first repurposing of the machinery of sacrifice set in motion a process of mutation that would lead nineteen Arabs who had received their training in Afghanistan to hijack airplanes on September 11 and that would in time transform what began as a cult of martyrs created by a small group of Afghan jihadis into the transnational scattering of suicide bombers that haunts our world today.

Drawing on years of research in the region, Edwards traces the transformation of sacrifice using a wide range of sources, including the early poetry of jihad, illustrated martyr magazines, school primers and legal handbooks, martyr hagiographies, videos produced by suicide bombers, the manual of ritual instructions used by the 9/11 hijackers, and Facebook posts through which contemporary “Talifans” promote the virtues of self-destruction. 

About the Author

David B. Edwards is Professor of Anthropology at Williams College. He is the author of Heroes of the Age: Moral Fault Lines on the Afghan Frontier and Before Taliban: Genealogies of the Afghan Jihad.

Table of Contents

List of Illustrations
Preface

1 • Sacrifice
2 • Honor
3 • Martyrdom
4 • Virtue and Vice
5 • Fedayeen
6 • Suicide Bombing
7 • Selfies
8 • The Widening Gyre

Afghan Chronology (1964–2015)
Notes
Glossary
References
Index

Reviews

"Caravan of Martyrs is an exceptional book and a must-read not only for those interested in the phenomenon of suicide operations and Afghanistan but for anybody trying to make sense of some of the most pressing security challenges of our age."
Times Higher Education
"Edwards exposes masterfully what evolving conceptions and practices of sacrifice have done to Afghan culture and society. . . . It remains that Edwards’ manuscript is a must-read not only for people interested in Afghanistan, sacrifice or suicide bombing, but for anyone sensible to what it means to conduct global ethnography while staying grounded into a local context, to propose an analysis where personal memories and reference to the academic literature are brilliantly feeding each other."
Politics, Religion & Ideology
"Such a beautifully written and imaginative work comes along rarely—at once a deeply felt personal memoir about the author’s anthropological encounters with Afghanistan and a highly original theory about suicide bombing as sacrifice. Anthropologists of religion, violence, and Afghanistan will surely read this book, but so too should the journalists who cover Afghanistan and the policy makers whose decisions inextricably determine this fragile, exhausted country’s fate. They will appreciate the power of Edwards’s anthropological lens."—Steven C. Caton, Khalid Bin Abdullah Bin Abdulrahman Al Saud Professor of Contemporary Arab Studies, Harvard University
 
"David Edwards is one of the world's keenest chroniclers of how culture shapes, and is shaped by, war. In his most ambitious book yet, he turns his critical eye on the cult of human sacrifice that has overwhelmed and transformed the decades-long conflict in Afghanistan, forever altering Afghan political culture. Edwards's skill as a scholar and raconteur is surpassed only by the tragedy of the story he tells."—William McCants, author of The ISIS Apocalypse: The History, Strategy, and Doomsday Vision of the Islamic State
 
"This book is basically a tour together with the author through Afghanistan during the mid-1980s until the present. It takes you in gently to the world of suicide attacks and martyrology. Each chapter brings you closer and closer to the type of nihilistic violence so commonly seen today."—David Cook, Professor of Religion, Rice University??

"In this new book, David Edwards builds on his many years of studying Afghanistan to examine the diverse patterns of violent death, and the meaning imputed to them, during the tragic period from the 1970s to the present day. Edwards's use of a wide range of materials and his astute analyses substantially enrich our understanding of this tragic story of carnage and turmoil."—Barbara Metcalf, Professor Emeritus, Department of History, University of California, Davis

Awards

  • Senior Book Prize 2018, American Ethnological Society
  • Gregory Bateson Book Prize Honorable Mention 2018, Society for Cultural Anthropology