On Demand
Fear and Fantasy in Post-9/11 America
Susan Faludi provides an unexpected assessment of the post-September 11th era in The Terror Dream. Using the lens of gender relations, Ms. Faludi argues that Americans sought comfort in fables of female peril and of rescue at the hands of macho vigilantes, while feminist views were dismissed as unpatriotic.
Event: Susan Faludi will be in conversation with Corey Robin
Tuesday, October 23 at 7 pm
The Graduate Center, City University of New York
Proshansky Auditorium
365 5th Avenue (between 34th and 35th Streets)
The Terror Dream is available for purchase at amazon.com
- About This Program »
- Staff Bios »
- Contact UsĀ »
- Guest Hosts »
- Guest Picks »
- Latest Show »
- Tapes & Transcripts »
- Show Archive »
Features & Series
Podcast
Stay up to date.
Subscribe to the Podcast
Shop at Amazon!
Leonard Lopate Show picks
Start your Amazon shopping on WNYC.org and a portion of your total purchase goes to WNYC.
More
Comments
Refresh
following 9/11 poeple seemed inclined to forget not only attacks on home soil from early colonial days, but also about the burning of washington during the war 1812 and even the attack on perl harbor.
Don't know about anyone else but I have been hearing media referring to "President Butch" a lot recently. A collective freudian slip.
Also surely everyone remembers the President flying onto the aircraft carrier wearing a cod piece and proclaiming Mission Acccomplished, talk about rescue fantasies! which really ties into the previous big attack on American soil at Pearl harbor, all of which is old news on the analysis front. Which is to say, not how unexpected Susan Faludi's theory is, but props to her all the same.
This is fascinating.....just reserved a copy of the book at my library, can't wait to read it.
i told a bush supporter friend of mine, that she had to stop picking her political leaders like she used to choose her ex-boyfriends, for all the wrong reasons.
after that, we didn't have any more disagreements about President Problem Child, rather, we had more reasonable discussions regarding the constitutional powers of the presidency during wartime.
i know, i was cruel, but i just had to finally get through to her.
I think the examining the gender subtext of our popular and political culture is key to understanding our current situation.
Gender subtext informs everything we think, say and do, and yet never, ever, speak about out loud.
Kudos to Susan Faludi for illuminating something so essential to understanding the world.
Bush's speaking style certainly drips with bored condescension, not specifically to women, but he does have that tone....the Great Father Protector trying to explain things to his slow-witted child, oh can't you just trust that I know best, you couldn't possibly understand. Run along and play, dearies....
Leave a Comment
Please stay on topic, be civil, and be brief.
Back to EpisodeEmail addresses are never displayed, but they are required to confirm your comments. Names are displayed with all comments. WNYC reserves the right to edit any comments posted on this site. Please read the WNYC.org Comment Guidelines before posting.