Terror, Culture, Politics: Rethinking 9/11

Front Cover
Daniel J. Sherman, Terry Nardin
Indiana University Press, 2006 - History - 271 pages

Terror, Culture, Politics: Rethinking 9/11 takes a critical look at the politics of American culture in the wake of the 2001 terrorist attacks. The volume takes as axiomatic--and, therefore, as demanding careful scrutiny--the connection between culture as creative expression and culture in the broader sense of the beliefs, values, and habits that members of a society hold in common. Coming from a wide array of disciplines--art history, history, literature, media studies, law, and political science--the contributors ask not so much how 9/11 changed American culture but how our existing cultural patterns, in such separate but linked domains as the media, public art, and political thought, shaped our responses to it.

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