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As a seminal event in late twentieth-century American history, the assassination of President John F. Kennedy has permeated the American consciousness in a wide variety of ways. His death has long fascinated American writers, filmmakers, and artists. The Kennedy Assassination offers an authoritative, critical exploration of the many ways the event has been constructed in a range of discourses.
The book looks at a variety of historical, political, and cultural attempts to understand Kennedy’s death. Representations include journalism from the time; historical accounts and memoirs; official investigations, government reports, and sociological inquiries; numerous conspiracy theories; novels, plays, and other works of literature; the Zapruder footage; and photography, avant-garde art, and Hollywood films.
Peter Knight has done the impossible—he has written a very interesting and readable book on the Kennedy assassination. [The book] will prove indispensable not only to students and researchers of American politics and culture over the last half century, but also to the general reader.
Peter Knight’s book on the Kennedy assassination is the best available source we have on the most symptomatic event of post-war American history. . . . Encyclopedic in scope, elegant and clear in its execution, wide-ranging in its assessment of the history and representational aftermath of that dark day in Dallas, this will be the ‘go-to' book on the Kennedy assassination for some time to come.
Peter Knight is senior lecturer in American studies at the University of Manchester. He is author of Conspiracy Culture: From Kennedy to "The X-Files" and editor of Conspiracy Nation: The Politics of Paranoia in Postwar America, Conspiracy Theories in American History: An Encyclopedia, and Fakes and Forgeries.