Harvest of Rage

On April 19, 1995, a Ryder truck filled with fenilizer and racing fuel exploded outside the Alfred P. Murrah Building in Oklahoma City, killing 168 peo­ple and wounding 500 others. Harvest of Rage is an extremely readable and informative attempt to place this brutal terrorist attack within the conte...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Kevin McCarron
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: International Institute of Islamic Thought 1999-04-01
Series:American Journal of Islam and Society
Online Access:https://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/view/2135
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author Kevin McCarron
author_facet Kevin McCarron
author_sort Kevin McCarron
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description On April 19, 1995, a Ryder truck filled with fenilizer and racing fuel exploded outside the Alfred P. Murrah Building in Oklahoma City, killing 168 peo­ple and wounding 500 others. Harvest of Rage is an extremely readable and informative attempt to place this brutal terrorist attack within the context of Christian fundamentalism, right-wing politics, and the dramatic decline in the living standards of America’s rural population. Joel Dyer is the editor of the Boulder Weekly and has written many investigative features on the farm crisis and the rise of the radical right. He begins by stating two themes that govern his book the reluctance of most Americans to recognize the existence of numerous terrorist organizations within America itself and the increasing tendency of these groups to use violence to achieve their aims. While the smoke was still clearing from America’s most infamous terrorist attack, all eyes looked across the Ocean for answers. The national media began to explore which faraway terrorists were likely culprits. After all, this was Oklahoma City, the middle of the American heartland, and only the mind of some foreign murderer could have conceived such a bloodthirsty plot. But in Oklahoma and around the nation, FBI agents were looking across our own Oceans of wheat, corn, and barley for their answers. They weren’t raiding the homes of Palestinian nationals or people born in Imq or Iran. Within hours of the blast, they were questioning men and women who had attended meetings on how to stop farm foreclosures or on how to return the country to a constitutional republic (p. 1). Harvest of Rage is divided into three parts: “Fertile Ground,” “The Seeds of Influence,” and “The Harvest,” all three of which share with the book‘s title an indebtedness to organic metaphors. This reliance on organic imagery is a major feature of Dyer’s book; the once-rich lands of the American heartland, he implies, are now fertile grounds only for terrorism. “Fertile Ground” examines the disastrous impact of recent government policies on America’s rural population, the subsequent disenchantment with conventional government, and the subsequent allure of organizations which respond to this growing dissatisfaction and anger. “The Seeds of Influence” focuses on the nature and beliefs of these numerous, primarily right-wing Christian groups which have proliferated throughout rural America in recent years, in particular those influenced by “Christian Identity” beliefs. ‘The Harvest” examines the bitter disputes concerning the meaning of the American Constitution and the increasing reliance of America’s disaffected rural population on common-law courts. Dyer is, of course, a journalist, and the book’s audience is the educated general reader. At times, Harvest of Rage is a little too lushly written, but the reader is never left in doubt as to the seriousness of the author‘s subject: “We will continue to pay the price-one building, one pipe bomb, one bumeddown church at a timeuntil we come to understand, first, that the nation is holding a loaded gun to its ...
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spelling doaj.art-02975aa9596549698b229dc57bd026a72022-12-21T20:11:28ZengInternational Institute of Islamic ThoughtAmerican Journal of Islam and Society2690-37332690-37411999-04-0116110.35632/ajis.v16i1.2135Harvest of RageKevin McCarronOn April 19, 1995, a Ryder truck filled with fenilizer and racing fuel exploded outside the Alfred P. Murrah Building in Oklahoma City, killing 168 peo­ple and wounding 500 others. Harvest of Rage is an extremely readable and informative attempt to place this brutal terrorist attack within the context of Christian fundamentalism, right-wing politics, and the dramatic decline in the living standards of America’s rural population. Joel Dyer is the editor of the Boulder Weekly and has written many investigative features on the farm crisis and the rise of the radical right. He begins by stating two themes that govern his book the reluctance of most Americans to recognize the existence of numerous terrorist organizations within America itself and the increasing tendency of these groups to use violence to achieve their aims. While the smoke was still clearing from America’s most infamous terrorist attack, all eyes looked across the Ocean for answers. The national media began to explore which faraway terrorists were likely culprits. After all, this was Oklahoma City, the middle of the American heartland, and only the mind of some foreign murderer could have conceived such a bloodthirsty plot. But in Oklahoma and around the nation, FBI agents were looking across our own Oceans of wheat, corn, and barley for their answers. They weren’t raiding the homes of Palestinian nationals or people born in Imq or Iran. Within hours of the blast, they were questioning men and women who had attended meetings on how to stop farm foreclosures or on how to return the country to a constitutional republic (p. 1). Harvest of Rage is divided into three parts: “Fertile Ground,” “The Seeds of Influence,” and “The Harvest,” all three of which share with the book‘s title an indebtedness to organic metaphors. This reliance on organic imagery is a major feature of Dyer’s book; the once-rich lands of the American heartland, he implies, are now fertile grounds only for terrorism. “Fertile Ground” examines the disastrous impact of recent government policies on America’s rural population, the subsequent disenchantment with conventional government, and the subsequent allure of organizations which respond to this growing dissatisfaction and anger. “The Seeds of Influence” focuses on the nature and beliefs of these numerous, primarily right-wing Christian groups which have proliferated throughout rural America in recent years, in particular those influenced by “Christian Identity” beliefs. ‘The Harvest” examines the bitter disputes concerning the meaning of the American Constitution and the increasing reliance of America’s disaffected rural population on common-law courts. Dyer is, of course, a journalist, and the book’s audience is the educated general reader. At times, Harvest of Rage is a little too lushly written, but the reader is never left in doubt as to the seriousness of the author‘s subject: “We will continue to pay the price-one building, one pipe bomb, one bumeddown church at a timeuntil we come to understand, first, that the nation is holding a loaded gun to its ...https://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/view/2135
spellingShingle Kevin McCarron
Harvest of Rage
American Journal of Islam and Society
title Harvest of Rage
title_full Harvest of Rage
title_fullStr Harvest of Rage
title_full_unstemmed Harvest of Rage
title_short Harvest of Rage
title_sort harvest of rage
url https://www.ajis.org/index.php/ajiss/article/view/2135
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