Rethinking Global Security

Media, Popular Culture, and the "War on Terror

Patricia Mellencamp author Wendy Kozol author Marcus Bullock author James Castonguay author Mary Layoun author Rebecca Decola author Andrew Martin editor Patrice Petro editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Rutgers University Press

Published:15th May '06

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Rethinking Global Security cover

Analysts today routinely look toward the media and popular culture as a way of understanding global security. Although only a decade ago, such a focus would have seemed out of place, the proliferation of digital technologies in the twenty-first century has transformed our knowledge of near and distant events so that it has become impossible to separate the politics of war, suffering, terrorism, and security from the practices and processes of the media. In ""Rethinking Global Security"", Andrew Martin and Patrice Petro bring together ten path-breaking essays that explore the ways that our notions of fear, insecurity, and danger are fostered by intermediary sources such as television, radio, film, satellite imaging, and the Internet. The contributors, who represent a wide variety of disciplines, including communications, art history, media studies, women's studies, and literature, show how both fictional and fact-based threats to global security have helped to create and sustain a culture that is deeply distrustful - of images, stories, reports, and policy decisions. Topics range from the ""Patriot Act"", to the censorship of media personalities such as Howard Stern, to the role that ""Buffy the Vampire Slayer"" and other television programming play as an interpretative frame for current events. Designed to promote strategic thinking about the relationships between media, popular culture, and global security, this book is essential reading for scholars of international relations, technology, and media studies.

The relationship between security policy and popular and public culture has changed dramatically over the last ten years, a change that calls out for probing critical attention. This timely collection pointedly responds to the need for genuine interdisciplinary engagement with such current issues. Its essays are excitingly original and sophisticated, providing analyses long overdue. - J. David Slocum, editor of Terrorism, Media, Liberation

ISBN: 9780813538297

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 563g

258 pages