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Be Very Afraid: The Cultural Response to Terror, Pandemics, Environmental Devastation, Nuclear Annihilation, and Other Threats
Contributor(s): Wuthnow, Robert (Author)
ISBN: 0199730873     ISBN-13: 9780199730872
Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
OUR PRICE:   $55.10  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: April 2010
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Social Science | Disasters & Disaster Relief
- Social Science | Sociology Of Religion
Dewey: 303.485
LCCN: 2009026879
Physical Information: 1" H x 6.2" W x 9.3" (1.25 lbs) 304 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Robert Wuthnow has been praised as one of the country's best social scientists by columnist David Brooks, who hails his writing as tremendously valuable. The New York Times calls him temperate, balanced, compassionate, adding, one can't but admire Mr. Wuthnow's views. A leading
authority on religion, he now addresses one of the most profound subjects: the end of the world.

In Be Very Afraid, Wuthnow examines the human response to existential threats--once a matter for theology, but now looming before us in multiple forms. Nuclear weapons, pandemics, global warming: each threatens to destroy the planet, or at least to annihilate our species. Freud, he notes, famously
taught that the standard psychological response to an overwhelming danger is denial. In fact, Wuthnow writes, the opposite is true: we seek ways of positively meeting the threat, of doing something--anything--even if it's wasteful and time-consuming. The atomic era that began with the bombing of
Hiroshima sparked a flurry of activity, ranging from duck-and-cover drills, basement bomb shelters, and marches for a nuclear freeze. All were arguably ineffectual, yet each sprang from an innate desire to take action. It would be one thing if our responses were merely pointless, Wuthnow observes,
but they can actually be harmful. Both the public and policymakers tend to model reactions to grave threats on how we met previous ones. The response to the terrorist attacks of 9/11, for example, echoed the Cold War--citizens went out to buy duct tape, mimicking 1950s-era civil defense measures,
and the administration launched two costly conflicts overseas.

Offering insight into our responses to everything from An Inconvenient Truth to the bird and swine flu epidemics, Robert Wuthnow provides a profound new understanding of the human reaction to existential vulnerability.