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They Know Us Better Than We Know Ourselves

The History and Politics of Alien Abduction

Hardcover

Published: 1st August 2007
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"Brown argues convincingly that alien abduction stories speak to several key issues in our culture, from environmentalism to changing ideas about reproduction. Extending far beyond textual readings, she instead tells the stories of individual people, treating them with respect, but with a critical lens as well. Her analysis of the role of 'experts' in alien abduction-their power and the misuses of that power-is utterly compelling."--Melanie McAlister, George Washington UniversitySince its emergence in the 1960s, belief in alien abduction has saturated popular culture, with the ubiquitous image of the almond-eyed alien appearing on everything from bumper stickers to bars of soap. Drawing on interviews with alleged abductees from the New York area, Bridget Brown suggests a new way for people to think about the alien phenomenon, one that is concerned not with establishing whether aliens actually exist, but with understanding what belief in aliens in America may tell us about our changing understanding of ourselves and our place in the world. They Know Us Better Than We Know Ourselves looks at how the belief in abduction by extraterrestrials is constituted by and through popular discourse and the images provided by print, film, and television. Brown contends that the abduction phenomenon is symptomatic of a period during which people have come to feel increasingly disinvested of the ability to know what is real or true about themselves and the world in which they live. The alien abduction phenomenon helps us think about how people who feel left out create their own stories and fashion truths that square with their own experience of the world.

"Brown argues convincingly that alien abduction stories speak to several key issues in our culture, from environmentalism to changing ideas about reproduction. Extending far beyond textual readings, she instead tells the stories of individual people, treating them with respect, but with a critical lens as well.... Utterly compelling." - Melanie McAlister, George Washington University"

Acknowledgmentsp. vii
Introductionp. 1
Elusive Shreds of Memory: The Trauma and Recovery of Alien Abductionp. 21
The Invisible Epidemic: Abduction Traumatistsp. 37
Good Subjects: Submitting to the Alienp. 52
My Body Is Not My Own: The Intimate Invasion of Alien Technologyp. 70
An Ongoing and Systematic Breeding Experimentp. 83
They Have the Secrets: Conspiracy Theory as Alternative Historyp. 100
This Is Worse Than Friggin' Aliens: Conspiracy Theory and the War against Citizensp. 121
Look and See What You Have Done: Abductees and the Burden of Global Consciousnessp. 142
You Have a Sensitivity: The Limits of Chosennessp. 160
Reality Gets Exploded: Abductee Culture, Abductee Beliefp. 177
Conclusion: Alien Abduction and the New Face of Terrorp. 207
Notesp. 211
Bibliographyp. 239
Indexp. 243
About the Authorp. 247
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

ISBN: 9780814799215
ISBN-10: 0814799213
Audience: General
Format: Hardcover
Language: English
Number Of Pages: 288
Published: 1st August 2007
Publisher: New York University Press
Dimensions (cm): 23.2 x 15.6  x 2.1
Weight (kg): 0.458