Synopses & Reviews
The subject of this breakthrough book is controversial, but its message is simple: the study of UFOs merits the serious attention of the intellectual establishment. Advocating credibility for this much-maligned field of research, historian David Jacobs and his coauthors highlight some of the key events, issues, themes, and theories surrounding this elusive, complex, and compelling subject.
Whether interplanetary tourists, interlopers from a parallel universe, or mere misfirings in the brain, UFOs and "aliens" permeate popular culture. They've made the covers of Time, Life, and the New York Times Book Review; garnered CNN coverage; turned up on Larry King Live and other high-profile talk shows; attracted large audiences for films and television series; and swamped the Internet with thousands of websites and discussion groups.
Despite this pervasive presence, few scholars have been willing to study the perplexing phenomena behind these cultural signifiers. Wary of a field that seems tainted by suspect methods and outlandish theories, many have logically stayed away.
The relative lack of academic participation, however, creates a vicious circle that prevents the development of standards that would attract greater academic participation and, thus, credibility and funding for the field. Meanwhile, the phenomenon, rather than fading from public awareness, continues to grow and evolve.
In response, this volume provides a kind of primer for scholars, skeptics, and others uneasy about investigating this field. Its authors examine the nature of UFO "evidence"; discuss the methodological debates; incorporate research from science, history, mythology, and psychology; and highlight the reactions of the government and military from the Cold War to the present. It also brings together for the first time in one book three bestselling authors—Jacobs, Budd Hopkins, and Pulitzer Prize winner John Mack—widely known for their writings on the highly controversial "alien abduction" phenomenon.
Description
Includes bibliographical references (p. 351-358) and index.
Table of Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction, David M. Jacobs
1. Ufology and Academia: The UFO Phenomenon as a Scholarly Discipline, Stuart Appelle
2. Limited Access; Six Natural Scientists and the UFO Phenomenon, Ron Westrum
3. Science, Law, and War: Alternative Frameworks for the UFO Evidence, Don C. Donderi
4. UFOs, the Military, and the Early Cold War Era, Michael D. Swords
5. The Extraterrestrial Hypothesis in the Early UFO Age, Jerome Clark
6. UFOs: Lost in the Myths, Thomas E. Bullard
7. The UFO Abduction Controversy in the United States, David M. Jacobs
8. Hypnosis and the Investigation of UFO Abduction Accounts, Budd Hopkins
9. How the Alien Abduction Phenomenon Challenges the Boundaries of Our Reality, John E. Mack
10. The UFO Experience: A Normal Correlate of Human Brain Function, Michael A. Persinger
11. Research Directions, David M. Jacobs
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Contributors
Index