Available Formats
Homeland: The War on Terror in American Life
By (Author) Richard Beck
Verso Books
Verso Books
1st July 2025
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
363.3250973
Hardback
592
Width 153mm, Height 234mm, Spine 40mm
761g
To see America through the lens of Homeland is to understand the country like never before. For years after 9/11, the war on terror was simultaneously everywhere and nowhere. Americans found themselves living in two worlds at the same time, with all of the military violence occurring overseas even as the threat of sudden mass death permeated life at home. Richard Beck grippingly explores how life took on all kinds of unfamiliar shapes, changing peoples sense of themselves, their neighbours and the strangers they sat next to on planes. He describes the NFL games fortified like military bases in enemy territory. The surging sales of guns, SUVs and pickup trucks. The racism and xenophobia, erosion of free speech and normalisation of mass surveillance.
A war launched to avenge an attack committed by two dozen people quickly came to span much of the globe. Beck searchingly asks why those Americans who excused or endorsed the worst abuses of the war on terror also had the easiest time understanding themselves as patriots. It is a drastic oversimplification to say that the war on terror betrayed US values. In many respects, it embodied them. This is a fascinating and defining account of the meaning of twenty-first-century America.
A rich and memorable new history. * David Wallace-Wells, New York Times *
We are living in a golden age of Big Books, with doorstop-size nonfiction that is as captivating as it is meticulous. Homeland throws its hat into this ring and holds its own among the very best recent examples of the genre. * Ed Burmila, New Republic *
Richard Beck is an editor at n+1 magazine. He is the author of We Believe the Children: A Moral Panic in the 1980s and lives in Brooklyn, New York.