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When United Flight 93, the fourth plane hijacked in the September
11, 2001 terrorist attacks, crashed into a field near Shanksville,
Pennsylvania, the gash it left in the ground became a national site
of mourning. The flight's 40 passengers became a media obsession,
and countless books, movies, and articles told the tale of their
heroic fight to band together and sacrifice their lives to stop
Flight 93 from becoming a weapon of terror. In Angel Patriots,
Alexander Riley argues that by memorializing these individuals as
patriots, we have woven them into much larger story of our
nation-an existing web of narratives, values, dramatic frameworks,
and cultural characters about what it means to be truly American.
Riley examines the symbolic impact and role of the Flight 93
disaster in the nation's collective consciousness, delving into the
spontaneous memorial efforts that blossomed in Shanksville
immediately after the news of the crash spread; the ad-hoc sites
honoring the victims that in time emerged, such as a Parks
Department-maintained memorial close to the crash site and a Flight
93 Chapel created by a local Catholic priest; and finally, the
creation of an official, permanent crash monument in Shanksville
like those built for past American wars. Riley also analyzes the
cultural narratives that evolved in films and in books around the
events on the day of the crash and the lives and deaths of its
"angel patriot" passengers, uncovering how these representations of
the event reflect the myth of the authentic American nation-one
that Americans believed was gravely threatened in the September 11
attacks. A profound and thought-provoking study, Angel Patriots
unveils how, in the wake of 9/11, America mourned much more than
the loss of life.
When United Flight 93, the fourth plane hijacked in the September
11, 2001 terrorist attacks, crashed into a field near Shanksville,
Pennsylvania, the gash it left in the ground became a national site
of mourning. The flight's 40 passengers became a media obsession,
and countless books, movies, and articles told the tale of their
heroic fight to band together and sacrifice their lives to stop
Flight 93 from becoming a weapon of terror. In Angel Patriots,
Alexander Riley argues that by memorializing these individuals as
patriots, we have woven them into much larger story of our
nation-an existing web of narratives, values, dramatic frameworks,
and cultural characters about what it means to be truly American.
Riley examines the symbolic impact and role of the Flight 93
disaster in the nation's collective consciousness, delving into the
spontaneous memorial efforts that blossomed in Shanksville
immediately after the news of the crash spread; the ad-hoc sites
honoring the victims that in time emerged, such as a Parks
Department-maintained memorial close to the crash site and a Flight
93 Chapel created by a local Catholic priest; and finally, the
creation of an official, permanent crash monument in Shanksville
like those built for past American wars. Riley also analyzes the
cultural narratives that evolved in films and in books around the
events on the day of the crash and the lives and deaths of its
"angel patriot" passengers, uncovering how these representations of
the event reflect the myth of the authentic American nation-one
that Americans believed was gravely threatened in the September 11
attacks. A profound and thought-provoking study, Angel Patriots
unveils how, in the wake of 9/11, America mourned much more than
the loss of life.
This new volume of the SAGE Social Thinkers series provides a
concise introduction to the work, life, and influences of Emile
Durkheim, one of the informal "holy trinity" of sociology's
founding thinkers, along with Weber and Marx. The author shows that
Durkheim's perspective is arguably the most properly sociological
of the three. He thought through the nature of society, culture,
and the complex relationship of the individual to the collective in
a manner more concentrated and thorough than any of his
contemporaries during the period when sociology was emerging as a
discipline.
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