Torture and the Military Profession (2007), co-author (with Matthew Talbert) of War Crimes: Causes, Excuses, and Blame (2018) and has published more than 40 articles and book chapters on topics including war crimes, military ethics, torture, terrorism, and security.
Wolfendale applied the “Page 99 Test” to her new book, American Torture and American Terrorism: The Myth of American Decency, and shared the following:
Page 99 describes the close relationship between state and nonstate white supremacist terrorism during the Jim Crow era. During this time, the KKK (a nonstate group) inflicted terrorism on Black communities to maintain and enforce white social and political control. But state officials also played an important role in this violence. To quote from the page: “Law enforcement officers often tolerated extra-legal and vigilante violence (and even participated in it); they failed to arrest perpetrators, let alone seek their prosecution; and they used violence to enforce the law disproportionately and arbitrarily against Black Americans and their supporters.”Learn more about American Torture and American Terrorism at the Oxford University Press website.
Page 99 is a good example of one of the main arguments I make in the book – that white supremacist terrorism is embedded in American society and that state officials were (and still are) often implicated in inflicting terrorism on Black Americans. But it doesn’t refer to other core arguments in the book. For example, it doesn’t refer to the definition of terrorism I propose in Chapter 1, nor the definition of torture I defend. And it doesn’t give readers a good sense of the scope of the book’s arguments. For example, the book discusses torture and terrorism in relation to incarceration, immigration detention, police violence, American colonialism, and drone warfare.
Page 99 is interesting because it offers a “taste” of the book’s overall argument: that torture and terrorism, inflicted by state institutions and state officials on predominantly nonwhite people (particularly Black Americans) has a long history in America, challenging the idea that American is a morally decent society. And this history has been largely ignored or minimized in mainstream political, legal, and social narratives about American history. So it’s crucial to bring to light the scale and impact of American torture and terrorism on the many thousands of victims of these practices.
--Marshal Zeringue









