Emmanouil Aretoulakis embraces controversy and conflict with courage by delving into the forbidden aesthetics of the images of terrorism, unraveling the ethical and a-moral implications of the Kantian feeling of pleasure that trumps the impotency of the awe and terror of the sublime. He proposes that along with empathy and humor, aesthetic judgement empowers the viewer or reader who survives as witness to horrific events rather than cowering in fear to their devastation. If scholars of terrorism wish to reflect on its spectacular images in a meaningful way, this book's developing thesis will guide them through the multidisciplinary labyrinth of philosophy, semiotics, media studies, psychology, and sociology