Ikea Towers. "Worlds in Collision: Terror and the Future of Global Order" by Ken Booth and Tim Dunne (eds) and "Terror: A Meditation on the Meaning of September 11" by John Carroll. [review]
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Date
2002-11
Authors
Coady, Tony
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Publisher
Australian Book Review
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Abstract
These two books represent strikingly different responses to the events of September 11; indeed, in some respects, they encompass radically divergent human reactions to tragedy of any sort. "The Worlds in Collision" collection is mostly cool, analytic and carefully reasoned; it contains a pooling of ideas from many different sources, an academic symposium in print. John Carroll's book is highly personal, rhetorical and passionately grim. He calls it 'a meditation', but the tone is not one of quiet reflection, but of prophetic jeremiad. Ken Booth and Tim Dunne want to help us cope with an urgent political problem; Carroll wants to indict a spiritual disease and issue a call for cultural reform. The stock-in-trade of most of the contributors to "Worlds in Collision" is argument; for Carroll it is primarily metaphor.
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Australian, Book Reviews, Publishing
Citation
Coady, Tony 2002. Ikea Towers. Review of "Worlds in Collision: Terror and the Future of Global Order" by Ken Booth and Tim Dunne (eds) and "Terror: A Meditation on the Meaning of September 11" by John Carroll. 'Australian Book Review', No 246, November, 27-28.