RT Article T1 Secular/Religious Myths of Violence: The Case of Nizārī Ismailis of the Alamūt Period JF Studia Islamica VO 114 IS 1 SP 47 OP 68 A1 Mohammad Poor, Daryoush 1975- LA English PB Brill YR 2020 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1685398731 AB Contemporary narratives of violence, particularly in the aftermaths of the most recent expressions of violence by the so-called ‘Islamist' groups have rekindled the false dichotomy of religious versus secular violence. Such a deforming prism which has also become dominant in political science traces the origins of violence to faith communities in medieval times and, among others, to Nizārī Ismailis, with whom the myth of the assassins have been associated. Despite the ground-breaking works of prominent scholars of Ismaili studies, the myth of the assassins still remains powerful in some disciplines including political theory. This paper deconstructs this narrative and attempts to highlight the agencies of individuals and communities, as human agents, as opposed to essentialist narratives in which faith, or a particular faith, in its abstraction, becomes responsible for the outbreak of violence. Moving beyond reductionist narratives of violence is critical for breaking the vicious cycle of violence which besets human societies around the globe. K1 Ismailis K1 Nizaris K1 Ḥashshāshīn K1 Assassins K1 Political Theory K1 terreur K1 Terror K1 théorie politique K1 Violence DO 10.1163/19585705-12341388