Overslaan en naar de inhoud gaan
In serie
English

Invitation to Terror

Lone Wolves and the Culture of Fear
Frank Furedi

Western culture lives on a diet of fear and panic and offers an invitation to be terrorised.

Western culture appears to feed of a diet of fear and panic and inadvertently offers its enemies and malcontents an invitation to be terrorized. The official reaction on an act of terror is driven by a narrative of fear that invites us to regard terrorism as incomprehensible, senseless and beyond meaning. Why do some – fortunately very few – individuals embark on the path of inflicting mass violence on their fellow citizens? Are they making a political statement or just a claim for recognition? How society responds to an act of terror will determine its impact.

Frank Furedi is a sociologist and social commentator. He was formerly Professor of Sociology at the University of Kent in Canterbury. His research is oriented towards the study of the workings of precautionary culture and risk aversion in Western societies. In his books he has explored controversies and panics over issues such as health, children, food, new technology and terrorism. He wrote a range of influential books that are also translated into Dutch:  ‘Culture of Fear’ (2002), ‘Where have All the Intellectuals Gone?’(2005), ‘Invitation to Terror: the Expanding Empire of the Unknown’ (2007).

Interesting links
Frank Furedi
Talk How Modern Society deals with Fear
 

Ook in deze serie

Zie ook

Placeholder
Rien Segers. Co-referent: Frank Jan de Graaf
Nederlands

De wereld na de crisis zal er in veel opzichten volstrekt anders uitzien dan daarvoor. Drie ontwikkelingen zijn daar verantwoordelijk voor.

Hinke van der Werf, Jochen Mierau en Willem Drenthen
Nederlands
De zorg piept en kraakt. Zorgkosten rijzen de pan uit, er zijn niet genoeg handen aan het bed en de IC-capaciteit schiet tekort. Loopt het zorgsysteem vast?
Aletta Jacobs Lecture 2010
Lisa Appignanesi
Women and the Mind Doctors
English

Ever since the birth of the mind-doctoring professions in the first part of the 19th century, women have not only been patients, but served as