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Peter
Knight (eds)
Conspiracy
Nation: The Politics of Paranoia in Postwar America
Synopsis
Why are Americans today so fascinated
by the X-Files? How did rumors emerge about the origins
of the AIDS virus as a weapon of biowarfare? Why does the
Kennedy assassination provoke heated debate nearly forty
years after the fact, and what do we make of Hillary Clinton's
accusation of a "vast right-wing conspiracy" against
her husband? The origins of these ideas reveal important
facets of American culture and politics.
Placing conspiracy thinking at the center
of American history, and challenging the knee-jerk dismissal
of conspiratorial thought as deluded and sometimes dangerous,
Conspiracy Nation provides a wide-ranging survey of conspiracy
theories in contemporary America. In the 19th century, inflammatory
rhetoric about slave revolts, the well-publicized specter
of the black rapist, and the formation of the Ku Klux Klan
all worked as conspiracy theories to legitimate an emerging
sense of national consciousness based on an ideology of
white supremacy. Today, panicked responses to increasing
multiculturalism and globalization yield new notions of
victimhood and new theories about conspiratorial plans for
global domination. Offering up a provocative array of examples,
ranging from alien abduction to the novels of DeLillo and
Pynchon to Tupac Shakur's "paranoid style," Conspiracy
Nation documents and unearths the workings of conspiracy
in the contemporary moment.
Their conclusions, sometimes startling
and always compelling, have much to say about the nature
of identity and anxiety, imagination and politics, and the
state of the American psyche today.
Contributors: Clare Birchall, Jack
Bratich, Bridget Brown, Jodi Dean, Ingrid Walker Fields,
Douglas Kellner, Peter Knight, Fran Mason, John A. McClure,
Timothy Melley, Eithne Quinn, and Skip Willman.
Details
Format: 286 pages, paperback
Date: February 1, 2002
Publisher: New York University Press
ISBN: 0814747361
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