Nickie Michaud Wild's edited volume is a much welcome contribution to the field of 9/11 studies. Its target audience is a generation who may not have any personal recollection of the event. The volume guides its readers to think critically about the official narration and memorialization of 9/11, as well as their impact on the U.S. cultural and political field. At its focus is the media's role in "creating" 9/11 as a socio-cultural phenomenon. Michaud Wild does a superb job of contextualizing this topic with sections covering the political and intellectual foundations of the attacks. It is an excellent source for educators and students, as well as the general public who seek to better comprehend a phenomenon that has been most influential in shaping the U.S. society for the last 20 years." —Elif Babül, assistant professor of anthropology at Mount Holyoke College"This is a wonderful book for introducing students to various sociological perspectives on the causes and consequences of the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks. Wild has deftly compiled a diverse collection of readings that promote a nuanced and critical awareness of how our shared understanding of 9/11 initially took shape the many ways that the stories of 9/11 have been revised as they are retold in media, politics, and popular culture." —Brian Monahan, assistant professor at Baldwin Wallace University"This is a really smart book, and a great idea for an undergraduate sociology course. Professor Michaud Wild has curated a wonderful collection of readings, drawn from leading scholars and spanning a range of disciplines and perspectives. Michaud Wild lends her own sophisticated analysis in helpful introductions to each section, and she includes exercises that encourage students to engage their sociological imaginations. This book is clearly the product of a master teacher at work." —Ron Jacobs, professor of sociology, University at Albany, State University of New York"Nearly twenty years after the collective trauma of September 11, 2001, Nickie Michaud Wild takes us back to the terrorist attacks, their immediate social aftermath, and the subsequent War on Terror. Using primary documents to trace how government and media shaped the official story, the book is an accessible introduction to the sociology of mass media as well as a nuanced historical reading of a defining American moment. Readers encountering this history for the first time are also asked to draw out the legacies of 911 for American politics today – widespread resistance to globalization, feelings of national insecurity, the normalization of Islamophobia, and declining rationality in public discourse." —Eleanor Townsley, Andrew W. Mellon Professor of Sociology, Mount Holyoke College