Anthrax: Bioterror as Fact and Fantasy

Hardcover
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Author: Philipp Sarasin

ISBN-10: 0674023463

ISBN-13: 9780674023468

Category: Military History

The potential for creating and using biological weapons to wreak havoc is an urgent concern not just in America, but worldwide. In fact, many security experts believe that the next act of widespread terrorism will likely come from a weapon of biochemical means.\ In Anthrax: Bioterror as Fact and Fantasy, Philipp Sarasin explores the real threats of biological weapons—in contrast to the idea of biological substances as nebulous agents of terror—by analyzing the famous anthrax scares that...

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The potential for creating and using biological weapons to wreak havoc is an urgent concern not just in America, but worldwide. In fact, many security experts believe that the next act of widespread terrorism will likely come from a weapon of biochemical means.In Anthrax: Bioterror as Fact and Fantasy, Philipp Sarasin explores the real threats of biological weapons—in contrast to the idea of biological substances as nebulous agents of terror—by analyzing the famous anthrax scares that occurred in the United States in 2001. Basing his analysis on government documents and media coverage between the events of September 11, 2001, and the beginning of the Iraq War in March 2003, he shows that the anthrax letters became the necessary fantasy-link between the 9/11 attacks and Saddam Hussein's "weapons of mass destruction." While many bioterrorism experts agree that it would be difficult to use anthrax effectively as a weapon in a large-scale attack, the anthrax scares that occurred in the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks amplified the American public's fear and uncertainty about what might come next. In effect, these incidents infected the American psyche and created an increased sense of vulnerability that shaped the public's understanding of the War on Terror. Sarasin, in offering a European's view of the U.S. reaction to the anthrax scare, argues that while threats of bioterrorism are real, they are disproportionate to the fantasmal fears and illusions that now permeate American politics and culture. In short, fear of bioterror has contaminated modern American life. Adam Wishart - Times Literary Supplement 'The history of bioweapons and "bioterror," as people began to say in the 1990s, is as much a history of facts as it is a narrative...built on phantasms,' writes Philipp Sarasin in his erudite polemic, Anthrax. Sarasin shows how stories as diverse as Tom Clancy's novels and nineteenth-century disease myths contributed to the general feeling of terror...Anthrax is an incisive, intriguing, and well-researched cultural history of the anthrax attacks. As yet, none of the perpetrators have been apprehended, though it seems likely that some of the weapon grade material might have come from within an American facility.

Prologue: Ground ZeroI. On the Way to Baghdad1. Videogames, 9/11, and the Anthrax Letters2. Bioterror and Weapons of Mass Destruction3. The Cobra Event4. What Is an Author?II. Microbes5. Foreign Bodies6. Infection, the Metaphor of GlobalizationEpilogue: Smallpox LiberalismNotesAcknowledgmentsIndex

\ Times Literary Supplement'The history of bioweapons and "bioterror," as people began to say in the 1990s, is as much a history of facts as it is a narrative...built on phantasms,' writes Philipp Sarasin in his erudite polemic, Anthrax. Sarasin shows how stories as diverse as Tom Clancy's novels and nineteenth-century disease myths contributed to the general feeling of terror...Anthrax is an incisive, intriguing, and well-researched cultural history of the anthrax attacks. As yet, none of the perpetrators have been apprehended, though it seems likely that some of the weapon grade material might have come from within an American facility.\ — Adam Wishart\ \ \