
New Books in History Jason Burke, "The Revolutionists: The Story of the Extremists Who Hijacked the 1970s" (Knopf, 2026)
Jan 22, 2026
Jason Burke, a veteran journalist and author of *The Revolutionists*, explores the chaotic world of 1970s international terrorism. He delves into the motivations behind high-profile hijackings, highlighting figures like Leila Khaled and Carlos the Jackal. Burke discusses the intertwining of leftist and Islamist movements, the role of foreign fighters, and the evolving perceptions of violence. Through a mix of primary sources and interviews, he humanizes militants while revealing complex narratives that challenge common stereotypes about this turbulent period.
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Parallel Roots Of 1970s Extremism
- The book traces the first international wave of terrorism from the late 1960s through the early 1980s as a global phenomenon.
- Jason Burke links secular left-wing revolutionaries and emerging Islamist extremism to show their parallel development and influence on later decades.
Translation Tools Open New Archives
- New translation tools (DPAI, Google Translate) let Burke access non-English primary and secondary sources he otherwise couldn't.
- Those sources revealed perspectives underrepresented in English-language narratives of 1970s extremism.
Islamism's 1960s Origins
- Islamist extremism began earlier than commonly assumed, rooted in late-1960s events like Sayyid Qutb's execution and the 1967 war.
- Burke argues Islamism borrowed tactics, vocabulary, and revolutionary aims from contemporary leftist movements.





