Robert Emmet Meagher is Professor of Humanities in the School of Humanities, Arts and Cultural Studies at Hampshire College, Amherst, MA. With degrees from the University of Notre Dame (summa cum laude) and the University of Chicago, he joined the Hampshire faculty in 1972. Prior to that, he taught religious studies and theology at Indiana University and the University of Notre Dame. He has also held visiting chairs and professorships at numerous colleges and universities, including Trinity College Dublin and Yale University. His publications include over a dozen books, as well as numerous translations and original plays. His most recent books are Herakles Gone Mad: Rethinking Heroism in an Age of Endless War and Killing from the Inside Out: Moral Injury and Just War. He has offered workshops on the translation and contemporary production of ancient drama at colleges and universities here and abroad, and has himself directed productions at such venues as the Samuel Beckett Centre, Dublin and the Nandan Centre for the Performing Arts in Kolkota, India. In recent years he has directed and participated in a range of events and programs concerned with healing the spiritual wounds of war in veterans, their families, and their communities.
"Elegantly written and easily accessible to lay readers--his prose
unburdened by any military jargon or acronym-soup--Killing From the
Inside Out is an ideal read for anyone curious about American
adventurism abroad, the future of civil-military relations, and the
human--and moral--toll of war."
--Lionel Beehner, founding editor of Cicero Magazine and member of
the Council on Foreign Relations, New York City, NY "Meagher has
written the essential rebuttal to Just War theory. This book should
be read by scholars, warriors, clergy, politicians, and anyone
caring for those suffering from moral injury related to military
service."
--Kimberly P. May, MD, Col (retired), USAF and the Veterans
Administration, Leeds, MA "Bob Meagher's seminal and timely work,
with its reach from antiquity to today, shows that there never was
a just war that would leave its participants unscarred."
--Rev. Michael Lapsley, director, the Institute for Healing
Memories, Cape Town, South Africa "I found this book gripping,
illuminating, and prophetic. In a so-called civilized world, where
we continue to accept all too easily the killing of innocents in
war, and the sometimes devastating long-term impact on those young
people we send into battle to kill on our behalf, it is utterly
timely."
--Rev. Ruth Scott, BBC broadcaster, international mediator, London,
UK "Meagher combines his own practical wisdom from many years of
working with combat veterans with decades of high quality
scholarship. As a reflective practitioner, I strongly recommend
this book to anyone truly interested in transforming the human cost
of war."
--Wilhelm Verwoerd, international peace and reconciliation worker,
Beyond Walls, Cape Town Area, South Africa "Another fundamental
truth this bold, beautifully written, and erudite work powerfully
conveys is the following: war kills not only those it buries in the
ground; it just as surely kills those souls who march home, heads
held high while the music plays and their loved ones cheer, yet
feeling inside they are forever lost."
--Lieutenant Colonel Douglas A. Pryer, US Army Intelligence, the
Pentagon, USA "Killing wounds the soul. But what if it's a 'just
war?' Meagher argues convincingly that to put the adjective 'just'
in front of the word 'war' is self-deception."
--Jim Forest, co-founder, the Orthodox Peace Fellowship, South
Bend, IN "This is a thoughtful, timely, and needed book. . . . Read
this book. Then ponder it. Then act on it. It just might save a
soul--your soul."
--Thomas C. Fox, publisher of the National Catholic Reporter "For
more than 10 years I have been working with former combatants in
different parts of the world, grappling with the profound human
cost of their involvement in war/violent political conflict. The
dominant discourses of 'post traumatic stress disorder' and 'just
war' really do not capture the deep wounding, the soul
fragmentation, and inner darkness that many of them continue to be
haunted by, especially those who come from religious backgrounds.
Meagher's book comes like a much needed breath of fresh
air--shining sensitive light on this darkness; pointing with
nuanced language to the depth of human wounding in war;
highlighting in particular the complicity of the 'just war'
tradition in this inner injuring and the difficulties of healing.
In this really important book, Meagher combines his own practical
wisdom from many years of working with combat veterans with decades
of high quality scholarship. As a reflective practitioner I
strongly recommend this book to anyone truly interested in
transforming the human cost of war."
--Wilhelm Verwoerd, international peace and reconciliation worker,
Beyond Walls, Cape Town Area, South Africa "Professor Meagher has
steered us through minefields of thought on just war and justified
killing, sacrifice and collateral damage, moral injury and its
consequences on individuals and society. His expertise in truth and
justice, and extensive experience interviewing individuals and
writing about moral injury serve to sharpen our understanding as we
help our veterans to wellness. Meagher has written the essential
rebuttal to Just War theory. This book should be read by scholars,
warriors, clergy, politicians, and anyone caring for those
suffering from moral injury related to military service. It is an
exceptional tour of Western thought on war and killing, and their
justification by our military, religious, and political
leaders."
--Kimberly May, MD, Col (retired), United States Air Force, Medical
Corps, Leeds, MA "The soul of the United States is infected by its
addiction to unending war. The suicide rate among soldiers and war
veterans has reached epidemic heights. Bob Meagher's seminal and
timely work, with its reach from antiquity to today, shows that
there never was a just war that would leave its participants
unscarred. We live with the terrible consequences of a process from
325 CE when Christian values began to be transposed with imperial
values. None of us are hardwired for war, so when we kill each
other there will be moral and spiritual injury no matter how
justified the war may be."
--Michael Lapsley, director, Institute for Healing of Memories,
Cape Town, South Africa "Under the skilled hand of this master of
the classics, the ancient Greeks cross the eons to bring their
wisdom into our time, on issues of vital importance--war and its
trail in the souls of killers and their communities. This is the
resource for understanding how the religion of the Prince of Peace
came to support war. Meagher brings us leaders of the early
Christian church, showing us how Christianity came to excuse, if
not promote, the industrialized and anonymous killing that war has
become. The able professor also weaves in the struggles of current
military veterans who struggle for inner peace having done what
they were told to do. He manages all this in a manner that gives
not despair, but life!"
--Amy Blumenshine, diaconal minister, Evangelical Lutheran Church
in America, Minneapolis Area Synod, Minneapolis, MN "In the field
of conflict transformation and peace-building there is a recognized
gap between grassroots practitioners who have lived through violent
conflict and are working with its legacy, and academics who are
considered to be 'experts' while lacking significant on-the-ground
experience. Bob Meagher is one scholar who bridges this gulf with
integrity, clarity, compassion, and challenge. Killing from the
Inside Out is a brilliant example of his ability to chart the
development of Just War Theory and consider it in the light of the
lived experience of human beings sent into battle across the
centuries. He doesn't swamp the reader with the vast scope of his
personal knowledge but helps us trace easily and engagingly the
attitudes to violent conflict and its moral status from the time of
the wars of ancient Greece, via the emergence and rise of
Christianity during the time of Imperial Rome and forward through
the writings of key figures to the present day. He draws
fascinating, thought-provoking, and some might say, disturbing
parallels between war-making and love-making from a male
perspective. He takes seriously the understanding of service
personnel deployed as combatants to conflict zones across the
world, whose experience illustrates why Just War Theory is dead. I
found this book gripping, illuminating, and prophetic. In a
so-called civilized world where we continue to accept all too
easily the killing of innocents in war, and the sometimes
devastating long-term impact on those young people we send into
battle to kill on our behalf, it is utterly timely."
--Ruth Scott, an Anglican Priest, a producer and presenter for the
BBC in London, a renowned international peace and conflict
resolution worker, and the author of many books, including Give a
Boy a Gun (with Alistair Little) and The Power of Imperfection
"Truth often hides, Robert Meagher reminds us, in Killing from the
Inside Out, especially when the truth challenges our myths, for
example, the myth that one can kill another human being and not be
damaged by so doing. The truth is no one leaves the battlefield
unwounded. Killing wounds the soul. But what if it's a 'just war?'
Meagher argues convincingly that to put the adjective 'just' in
front of the word 'war' is self-deception."
--Jim Forest, co-founded the Catholic Peace Fellowship in 1964 and
from 1977 through 1988 was Secretary General of the International
Fellowship of Reconciliation. Currently he serves as International
Secretary of the Orthodox Peace Fellowship. His books include The
Road to Emmaus: Pilgrimage as a Way of Life, Ladder of the
Beatitudes, Praying with Icons, Living With Wisdom: A Biography of
Thomas Merton, All Is Grace: A Biography of Dorothy Day, and Loving
Our Enemies: Reflections on the Hardest Commandment. "Bob Meagher
lays out a provocative argument: That 'just war, ' as a theory and
set of principles to guide us in battle, is effectively dead. He
tangles with the perverse assumption, passed down through the ages,
that there is a just way of taking another person's life, that
killing in wartime is somehow different from murder in peacetime.
That just war originates in Christian theology, and invoked in a
speech by an American president accepting a Nobel Peace Prize, is
even more puzzling. Meagher grapples with not just the collective
moral crisis nations go through when they use violence to achieve
political ends, but also how ex-soldiers grapple with their own
consciences over their actions in the heat of battle, or what he
calls 'moral injury.' He comes at the subject not as a pacifist but
as an ethicist, marshaling impressive evidence, from the works of
St. Augustine to Camus, to make his case. The book recounts the
harrowing stories of soldiers who struggle to cope with what
they've done in combat, what they've seen, and the scars that stay
with them in their postwar lives. Elegantly written and easily
accessible to lay readers--his prose unburdened by any military
jargon or acronym-soup--Killing From the Inside Out is an ideal
read for anyone curious about American adventurism abroad, the
future of civil-military relations, and the human--and moral--toll
of war."
--Lionel Beehner, founding editor of Cicero Magazine and former
senior writer at the Council on Foreign Relations "Specialists in
the field will welcome this book, not only because of its
provocative argument, but because there are gems that will enrich
even advanced readers's knowledge or thinking. Those who are mostly
familiar with international law and secular Just War Theory will
find the brisk, sound survey of developments in chapters 4-6
informative; those specializing in the Christian-ethical approach
to war will find provocative thoughts in the discussion of Greek
literature in chapter 1-3. Even for specialists in Christian ethics
or history, the way the author brought out the connections of love
and war in Greek literature, and then looked at developments in
early Christian thought, should prove stimulating. I am not aware
of other works that have explored this so well. I think the book
will appeal to people who think about the problem of war from any
angle, including philosophical, theological, historical, political,
and literary. The book has an accessible style married to serious
content that will work well for both beginning and advanced
readers. I can see many professors who teach about war and
peace--again, from a number of disciplinary angles--procuring the
book for their own edification, and then many adopting it for
courses. The book will definitely work for both undergraduate and
graduate student audiences in any courses that touch on war. The
introduction and conclusion and chapters 2 and 3, in particular,
are rich with conversation topics. As someone who teaches a basic
undergraduate religious-ethics course on war and peace, I would be
very interested in assigning this book for the way it puts the
charge against Just War Theory so pointedly and for how it could
set an ongoing problem for such a course. I can also see courses
from philosophy and political-science angles using the book."
--Brian Stiltner (Ph.D., Yale) is Chair of Philosophy, Theology,
and Religious Studies, Sacred Heart University, and coauthor of
Faith and Force: A Christian Debate about War. "Such Christian
thinkers as Augustine and Thomas Aquinas crafted Just War Theory
(JWT) in order to limit war. In Killing from the Inside Out,
Professor Robert Meagher, a poetic writer and brilliant classical
scholar, leverages history to provocatively argue that the opposite
has actually occurred and JWT has served only to legitimize and
inspire war. JWT, he convincingly contends, has also made it
tragically easy to deny the existence of moral injury, a condition
that commonly afflicts combat veterans and profoundly and
negatively affects psyches. How can combat veterans feel guilt or
shame, many wonder, if the war they fight is just? Thus the help
these afflicted warriors desperately need is withheld from them.
Another fundamental truth this bold, beautifully written, and
erudite work powerfully conveys is the following: war kills not
only those it buries in the ground; it just as surely kills those
souls who march home, heads held high while the music plays and
their loved ones cheer, yet feeling inside they are forever
lost."
--Lieutenant Colonel Douglas A. Pryer is an active-duty
counterintelligence officer who has deployed to Kosovo,
Afghanistan, and Iraq. He is the author of the book, The Fight for
the High Ground: The U.S. Army and Interrogation During Operation
Iraqi Freedom, May 2003 - April 2004. "Killing From the Inside Out
examines suicide--the form (of) self-inflicted death resulting
within as we acquiesce to war. Robert Emmet Meagher argues
persuasively 'just war' is a modern myth, and to kill another is to
kill a part of self. This is a thoughtful, timely, and needed book.
We need to look war in the eye as our nation, Meagher points out,
is on a perpetual warpath. We call it, 'the war against terrorism.'
Meagher cites historical thinkers, modern sages, and veterans back
from battle. He makes us think and think again as we consider war
and its pernicious effect, not only 'out' there, but 'inside' here,
inside our singular and collective souls. Read this book. Then
ponder it. Then act on it. It just might save a soul--your
soul."
--As one of the few American correspondents who spoke Vietnamese,
Thomas C. Fox covered the war for TIME, The New York Times and the
National Catholic Reporter. He now serves as NCR publisher. His
books include: Pentecost in Asia: A New Way of Being Church,
Sexuality and Catholicism, and Iraq: Military Victory, Moral
Defeat.
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