cover image Chasing Phantoms: Reality, Imagination, & Homeland Security Since 9/11

Chasing Phantoms: Reality, Imagination, & Homeland Security Since 9/11

Michael Barkun, Univ. of North Carolina, $32 (224p) ISBN 978-0-8078-3470-1

Barkun (Religion and the Racist Right), professor emeritus of political science at Syracuse University, explores "the gap between the reality of terrorism and the imagined threat of terrorism" in this timely if academic study. Linking this gap between reality and paranoia to the Bush administration's "overreaction" to terrorist threats—especially the unprecedented expansion of government power and the development of a "cumbersome homeland security bureaucracy"—the author focuses on "the issue of unseen dangers." Jargon—modalities of invisibility, "differential focusing," "convergent disinterest"—and analytical overindulgence will likely put off general readers, but Barkun convincingly lays out powerful arguments—including that "destruction fantasies" pervasive in popular culture contribute to creating an inner "landscape of fear." Without being too specific in his prescriptions, Barkun suggests that understanding the gulf between reality and imagination will restore a "proportional conception of terrorism and homeland security." Scholars, students, and policy makers will find much to ponder in this rigorous examination of homeland security and its demons. (Apr.)