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- From: mfenster@silver.ucs.indiana.edu (mark andrew fenster)
- Newsgroups: alt.conspiracy
- Subject: Re: Conspiracy books
- Message-ID: <C1H801.4qx@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu>
- Date: 26 Jan 93 19:40:49 GMT
- Sender: news@usenet.ucs.indiana.edu (USENET News System)
- Organization: Indiana University
- Lines: 48
- Nntp-Posting-Host: silver.ucs.indiana.edu
-
-
- Brad Pierce writes:
-
- >Are any of these books worth reading?
- >
- > _Architects of conspiracy : an intriguing history_ by William P.
- > Hoar, (Boston : Western Islands), 1984.
-
- Don't know this one; publisher would make me skeptical, though;
- they also did a number of Gary Allen's (of None Dare Call It
- Conspiracy fame) books.
-
- >
- > _Architects of fear : conspiracy theories and paranoia in American
- > politics_ by George Johnson, (Los Angeles : J.P. Tarcher), 1983.
-
- Generally a decent "rationalist" response to conspiracy theory
- from a center-liberal position (as far as that goes), with a lot
- of secondary sources.
- A great gift idea for Chip Berlet and Ted Frank fans.
- >
- > _Conspiracies, cover-ups, and crimes : political manipulation and
- > mind control in America_ by Jonathan Vankin, (New York : Paragon
- > House), 1991.
-
- New Journalism meets conspiracy theory. Lots of profiles of c.t.
- celebs; final section tries to piece together some of the major
- conspiracy theories. Saw Vankin at a convention in Atlanta a few
- months back and was unimpressed; apparently the hardcover
- edition (it just got released in paper) was published by a Moonie
- front (hence the no Moonies that someone noted on another post).
- There was a discussion of this either on this group or on
- the fnord listserv list a month or so ago.
-
- As to Hofstader's _Paranoid Style_, he's fine if you believe in
- his rather centrist assumptions about the triumph of American
- democracy; if you don't think the U.S. is as wonderful and capable
- of self-regulation and -reform as centrist academics of the
- immediate post-war era (and we should cut him some slack ---
- had he written the main essay in the book during the post-JFK,
- post-Vietnam, post-Watergate era, he may have come to some
- different conclusions), you'll be disappointed. I certainly
- would agree with much of his critique of the demogagy of the far
- right; I have my doubts about simply dismissing paranoia about
- the government out of hand.
-
-
- Mark Fenster
-