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The Terror Dream: Fear and Fantasy in Post-9/11 America

by Susan Faludi

ISBN-10: 9780805086928
ISBN-10: 0-8050-8692-7
ISBN-13: 9780805086928
ISBN-13: 978-0-8050-8692-8
Hardcover
2007-10-02
Metropolitan Books


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Editorials


Product Description
From the Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist and bestselling author of Backlash—an unflinching dissection of the mind of America after 9/11 In this most original examination of America’s post-9/11 culture, Susan Faludi shines a light on the country’s psychological response to the attacks on that terrible day. Turning her acute observational powers on the media, popular culture, and political life, Faludi unearths a barely acknowledged but bedrock societal drama shot through with baffling contradictions. Why, she asks, did our culture respond to an assault against American global dominance with a frenzied summons to restore “traditional” manhood, marriage, and maternity? Why did we react as if the hijackers had targeted not a commercial and military edifice but the family home and nursery? Why did an attack fueled by hatred of Western emancipation lead us to a regressive fixation on Doris Day womanhood and John Wayne masculinity, with trembling “security moms,” swaggering presidential gunslingers, and the “rescue” of a female soldier cast as a “helpless little girl”?
 
The answer, Faludi finds, lies in a historical anomaly unique to the American experience: the nation that in recent memory has been least vulnerable to domestic attack was forged in traumatizing assaults by nonwhite “barbarians” on town and village. That humiliation lies concealed under a myth of cowboy bluster and feminine frailty, which is reanimated whenever threat and shame looms.
 
Brilliant and important, The Terror Dream shows what 9/11 revealed about us—and offers the opportunity to look at ourselves anew.

Reviews


This book is brilliant
Susan Faludi convincingly shows how 9-11 became a cause and excuse for retrograde male narratives that fulfilled the standard of powerful, heroic men and terrified, helpless women. She also explodes with her research many of the accepted histories of so-called heroic or brave or manly men and proves most of them false.
This is an incredibly well-written and -researched book of cultural and historical criticism, written in an accessible style.

Riveting premise, but ultimately left me a little cold...
"The Terror Dream" has a riveting premise. In the aftermath of 9/11, the media and government embraced an antifeminist narrative that permeated (even dictated) public life. The nation suddenly saw men and women through the lenses of hero and victim, knight and damsel in distress. As is often the case, these roles were too narrowly defined, obscuring what was really going on.

Faludi's best evidence is in the first 100 pages, as she shows how coverage of 9/11 survivors and victims were shaped by a dishonest bias. Some of the examples she cites are disturbing, such as insincere concern for women's rights in Afghanistan. At other times the examples are downright entertaining, such as the story of the Jersey Girls' rebellion against the prepackaged scripting of their lives. The emphasis on widows and children of 9/11 was overdone. Even Lisa Beamer seems to have given up on the media.

After her initial, damning setup, Faludi began to lose me a bit. She is a bit like an overeager lawyer with too much evidence, willing to only consider one side. I could have done without the historical parallels that make up the last quarter of the book. I think she makes a compelling case for how national events get written inaccurately by a media caught up in mythology. I'm not sure it's really quite as bad as she paints it, though. Myths comfort people during troubled times and I'm not sure that can be avoided through this type of rational intellectualism. It's a bit like giving someone cough medicine when what they really need is chicken soup. And, as we saw in '04 and again this year, nearly half this country (those that vote, anyway) doesn't fall for this nationalistic gloss. If everyone were fooled by this, I'd be concerned. It's clear to me that not everyone is.

It's time for all of us to wake up
This book has arrived just in time for the 2008 election. Along with the PBS program, "Bush's War", this should be required reading for all voters. We can change the future but we must understand the past. Thank you again Susan for your excellent analysis.

Interesting Topic Worth Discussing
In "The Terror Dream" Susan Faludi writes, "A culture forges myths for many reasons, but paramount among them is the need to impose order on chaotic and disturbing experience--to resolve haunting contradictions and contain apprehensions, to imagine a way out of darkness." Throughout her book she presents a fascinating argument detailing how from the time of the Puritans, through the age of the wild frontier, to the era of the John Wayne archetype, American mythmakers--journalists and book publishers in particular-- have mythologized the 'heroic' male and consigned women to the role of frail 'victim' amidst the background of national anxiety or tragedy. Faludi skillfully presents a well-researched look into the Puritan view of the importance of being weak before God and how captivity was seen as a way to strengthen that aspect of their faith and character. Faludi introduces the reader to the 'captivity narrative' which was popular at the time and featured such heroines as Mary Rowlandson, who survived and escaped captivy from the Indians.

In the era of the wild frontier, however, the image of the rugged, solitary, independent frontiersman, best embodied by Daniel Boone, who fiercely decried the exaggerated image of him put forth by his contemporaries, become dominant and was made so by an increasing number portrayals of poor, defenseless women. Indians were made out to be the bad guys and I thought it was interesting how Faludi pointed out the similarities between 9/11 and the execution of nearly 300 Native American Indians in 1862. Faludi notes that in each crisis, society reacted in a way that did not allow a discourse to exist. The literary critic Kenneth Burke once wrote that, "History is an endless conversation." In the case of the 1862 execution of the Indians and the days immediately following 9/11, there was only a monologue. I did not know that very few women were allowed to contribute to Op-Ed sections of newspapers right after 9/11. Why? I was surprised to learn that some people reacted to 9/11 by saying, 'Well, this blows feminism right off the map!' Faludi rightfully questions the relation between feminism and the horrific events of 9/11.

It is a shame that people will most likely never know about the heroic exploits of Cynthia Ann Parker or Hannah Duston, but I am glad that there are people like Susan Faludi who will remind us that history and the mythmakers have overlooked figures who play such important roles in rejecting gendered stereotypes.

This is an excellent book and like many good books, it kept me thinking, even when I was not reading it. I am sure some people will not agree with everything she writes, but her argument deserves to be considered.

Creation (of a) myth
Being a long-time Faludi fan, I was not quite sure if I wanted to read a book about 9/11, not because I had been traumatized by the event or anything, but I was unsure that I would find a book that looked at all of the complex views of such a complex event. However, I found, as usual, Faludi's insight into the propagation of the Male-as-Hero Myth and the Female-as-Victim/Weak Myth to be an intriguing lens through which to look at 9/11. This books continues, in a way, the material that the author brought to BACKLASH, that women in a certain context can be subjugated or oppressed, depending on the need of those in power (in tis case, the media, and by extension, politicians). Faludi adds to the age-old paradigm of women as either virgins or whores; now they are also victims, even when they really aren't. Clearly there were heroines of 9/11, but why have they been obscured? One reviewer of this book actually proves Faludi's point about blaming feminism for being crybabies rather than being "Americans". I hate to be the one to burst anyone's bubble, but women are Americans, too, and they have every right to assert their position as participants in this Great Experiment, especially when they are purposely being erased by conservative pundits and the sexist media. I cannot wait for this book to come out in paperback so that I can put this as required reading on my college syllabus.


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