ABSTRACT

Cultural Resistance, 9/11, and the War on Terror: Sensible Interventions offers a fresh account of the enduring cultural legacies of the September 11, 2001 terror attacks and the global war on terror through the critical lens of cultural resistance. It assesses the intersecting ways that popular culture has been deployed as oppositional practice in the post-9/11 context by documenting a collection of media texts, including a political hip hop album, a TV sitcom, a best-selling novel and studio photographs. Deviating from the conventional discursive and representative axis of mourning, nationalism and commemoration, this multimedia assemblage contests and rearticulates the political meanings, affects and visualizations of the war on terror and its global consequences.

Drawing on the theoretical work of Jacques Rancière, the book also argues that these cultural artefacts are extending cultural resistance by shifting the scenes and methods of opposition to the realm of the sensible, or sensorial experiences. Never celebratory, the book encapsulates the potential of cultural practices against restricted post-9/11 regimes of visibility and audibility in the public sphere, but it also remains attentive to their blind spots, contradictions and constraints. This book offers a new angle to consider the events of 9/11, the war on terror and their continual effects, one that blurs established visions of patriotism and grief.

chapter 1|22 pages

Timely convergence

9/11, resistance, and popular culture

chapter 2|16 pages

A new target of resistance

9/11 and Rancière’s paradigm of the sensible

chapter 3|19 pages

An American tale from the margins

Decentering 9/11 narratives

chapter 4|26 pages

Restaging the war on terror and nationhood

Political rap’s sonic resistance

chapter 5|26 pages

Oppositional banality

Watching ordinary Muslims in Little Mosque on the Prairie

chapter 6|29 pages

Faces of the enemy

The Taliban in a photography studio

chapter 7|8 pages

Conclusion